Presentation
28 April 2017 Silicon photonic transceivers for beyond 1-Tb/s datacom applications (Conference Presentation)
Segolene Olivier, Corrado Sciancalepore, Karim Hassan, Daivid Fowler, Badhise Ben Bakir, Thomas Ferroti, Hélène Duprez, Jocelyn Durel, Alexis Abraham, Simon Plantier, Bertrand Szelag, Sylvie Menezo, Charles Baudot, Frédéric Boeuf, Frederic Y. Gardes, Nannicha Hattasan, Liam O'Faolain, Delphine Marris-Morini, Andrea Ghilioni, Melchiorre Bruccoleri, Anthony Martinez, Richard C. Pitwon, Nino Crameri, Tobias Lamprecht
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 10109, Optical Interconnects XVII; 101090G (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2255719
Event: SPIE OPTO, 2017, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
The field of silicon photonics is attracting a lot of attention due to the prospect of low-cost and compact circuits that integrate photonic and microelectronic elements on a single chip. Such silicon chips have applications in optical transmitter and receiver circuits for short-distance communications as well as for long-haul optical transmissions. Silicon photonics has proven to be a successful platform for many functional elements such as low-loss waveguides, filters, multiplexers/demultiplexers, optical modulators and Ge-on-Si photodiodes. On-going developments for advanced photonic integrated circuits include compact and energy-efficient silicon modulators, temperature-insensitive passive devices and hybrid III-V on Silicon lasers. The European COSMICC project gathers key industrial and research partners in the field of silicon photonics, CMOS electronics, printed circuit board packaging, optical transceivers and datacenters, aiming at developing low-cost and low-energy consumption 50 Gb/s 4-wavelength coarse wavelength division multiplexing optical transceivers that will be packaged on-board. Combining CMOS electronics and Si-photonics with innovative high-throughput fiber attachment techniques, the developed solutions will be scalable beyond 1 Tb/s to meet the future data-transmission requirements in data-centers and super computing systems.
Conference Presentation
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Segolene Olivier, Corrado Sciancalepore, Karim Hassan, Daivid Fowler, Badhise Ben Bakir, Thomas Ferroti, Hélène Duprez, Jocelyn Durel, Alexis Abraham, Simon Plantier, Bertrand Szelag, Sylvie Menezo, Charles Baudot, Frédéric Boeuf, Frederic Y. Gardes, Nannicha Hattasan, Liam O'Faolain, Delphine Marris-Morini, Andrea Ghilioni, Melchiorre Bruccoleri, Anthony Martinez, Richard C. Pitwon, Nino Crameri, and Tobias Lamprecht "Silicon photonic transceivers for beyond 1-Tb/s datacom applications (Conference Presentation)", Proc. SPIE 10109, Optical Interconnects XVII, 101090G (28 April 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2255719
Advertisement
Advertisement
KEYWORDS
Silicon photonics

Transceivers

Photonic integrated circuits

Silicon

Chemical elements

Data communications

Electronics

Back to Top