Research project

Laser-Engineered Silicon

Project overview

Silicon photonics promises to revolutionize modern optoelectronics by allowing for dense integration of components that feature the best optical and electronic functions of the material. In recent years great progress has been made in this area, with many silicon photonic devices now meeting (or exceeding) the performance requirements of state-of-the-art systems. This includes ultra-low loss interconnects as well as high speed optical regenerators, amplifiers, modulators, and detectors, which form the building blocks for photonic circuits. However, to date, much of this progress has been achieved on silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platforms with a thick buried oxide layer, which are largely incompatible with electronic device development, and relatively expensive, thus precluding truly integrated systems from reaching the high-volume market. Consequently, there are still crucial challenges to overcome before the performance benefits of SOI photonics outweigh the costs and design constraints, leaving the door open for alternative platforms to be considered. In this programme we propose to develop a low cost and low temperature laser materials processing procedure to fabricate high quality polycrystalline semiconductor photonic platforms that will rival the performance of their SOI counterparts. Laser processed polycrystalline materials are already well-established for use in electronic technologies where some performance can be sacrificed in favour of reduced processing costs, for example, in the backplanes of smart phones and televisions. However, if the polycrystalline grains can be grown as large as the individual components, then the optical (and electronic) properties will approach those of the single crystal materials. By building on the platform established by the electronics community, this work seeks to grow large grain polycrystalline materials to realize low loss photonic components. Importantly, the high localization of this laser crystallization procedure directly alleviates issues associated with multi-material and multi-layer photonic device integration, and can also be used to modify or repair the individual components at a late stage in the fabrication, helping to increase the production yield and reduce the costs of integrated systems. Furthermore, this method offers the unique advantage of removing the substrate dependence from semiconductor photonics, thus offering the possibility to extend the application space through the use of substrate materials with enhanced optical functionality, increased transparencies, or even flexible plastics. By reducing costs and barriers associated with device fabrication, our innovative project will set the scene for wide spread use of laser-engineered semiconductor photonic components in mainstream optoelectronic systems.

Staff

Lead researchers

Professor Anna Peacock

Professor of Photonics
Research interests
  • Nonlinear Optics
  • Fibre optics
  • Silicon Photonics
Connect with Anna

Other researchers

Professor Harold Chong

Professor of Electronic Engineering
Connect with Harold

Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups

Research outputs

Amar N. Ghosh, Stuart J. MacFarquhar, Ozan Aktaş, Than S. Saini, Swe Z. Oo, Harold M.H. Chong & Anna C. Peacock, 2023, Optics Express, 31(2), 1532-1540
Type: article
Ozan Aktaş, Yuji Yamamoto, Mehmet Kaynak & Anna Peacock, 2021, Communications Physics, 4(1)
Type: article
Ozan Aktaş, Yuji Yamamoto, Mehmet Kaynak & Anna Peacock, 2021
Type: conference
Ozan Aktaş, Stuart James MacFarquhar, Swe Oo, Antulio Tarazona, Harold Chong & Anna Peacock, 2020, Optics Express, 28(20), 29192-29201
Type: article
Xia Chen, Milan Milošević, Antoine Runge, Xingshi Yu, Ali Z. Khokhar, Sakellaris Mailis, David Thomson, Anna Peacock, Shinichi Saito & Graham Reed, 2020, Optics Express, 28(12), 17630-17642
Type: article
Milan Milošević, Xia Chen, Xingshi Yu, Nicholas, Joseph Dinsdale, Ozan Aktaş, Swe Oo, Ali Khokhar, David Thomson, Otto Muskens, Harold Chong, Anna Peacock, Shinichi Saito & Graham Reed, 2020, IEEE Journal of Lightwave Technology, 38(7), 1865-1873
Type: article