Analysis

Major step towards low-power all-optical switching for optical communications

29th January 2010
ES Admin
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The January issue of the premier scientific magazine Nature Photonics publishes an ultra-small and fast, electrically pumped all-optical memory on a silicon chip with record low power consumption. This result achieved by imec and its associated laboratory INTEC at the Ghent University, paves the way for optical packet switching with drastically reduced overall power consumption in high-speed, high-data rate optical telecommunication systems.
Fiber-optic communication systems have revolutionized the telecommunications industry and play a crucial role in today’s information age where long-distance and high-data rate communication is indispensable. While the transportation of the data bits between different points in such networks normally makes use of light pulses, it is quite a different story for the switching and routing of the data at the network nodes. Due to the absence of good optical random access memories, up to now, the data needed to be converted from the optical to the electrical domain and electronic switches with microelectronic processors were needed. However, with the ever increasing amount of data the power consumption of such optoelectronic switches increases dramatically.



Researchers from imec and Ghent University in Belgium realized extremely fast and small optical random access memories with record low power consumption. This discovery paves the way to do the switching in optical fiber networks or optical interconnect systems completely optically and to no longer rely on optoelectronic conversions.



The optical random access memory has been achieved with ultra-compact micro-disk lasers with a diameter of 7.5µm. The laser light can either propagate in the clockwise or counter clockwise direction and one can switch between these two laser modes using short optical pulses. The lasers, implemented themselves in Indium Phosphide membranes, are heterogeneously integrated onto passive silicon waveguide circuits. This allows to optically interconnect different memory cells using silicon wires. It also allows to use the strongly developed silicon-based microelectronics fabrication technology, making it a cost-effective solution.



These results were achieved in collaboration with TU Eindhoven and INL (Institute for Nanotechnology in Lyon) in the framework of the European FP7 projects HISTORIC and WADIMOS coordinated by imec- INTEC.

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