Microsystems & Nanoengineering (Mar 2023)

Integrated silicon photonic MEMS

  • Niels Quack,
  • Alain Yuji Takabayashi,
  • Hamed Sattari,
  • Pierre Edinger,
  • Gaehun Jo,
  • Simon J. Bleiker,
  • Carlos Errando-Herranz,
  • Kristinn B. Gylfason,
  • Frank Niklaus,
  • Umar Khan,
  • Peter Verheyen,
  • Arun Kumar Mallik,
  • Jun Su Lee,
  • Moises Jezzini,
  • Iman Zand,
  • Padraic Morrissey,
  • Cleitus Antony,
  • Peter O’Brien,
  • Wim Bogaerts

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-023-00498-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 22

Abstract

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Abstract Silicon photonics has emerged as a mature technology that is expected to play a key role in critical emerging applications, including very high data rate optical communications, distance sensing for autonomous vehicles, photonic-accelerated computing, and quantum information processing. The success of silicon photonics has been enabled by the unique combination of performance, high yield, and high-volume capacity that can only be achieved by standardizing manufacturing technology. Today, standardized silicon photonics technology platforms implemented by foundries provide access to optimized library components, including low-loss optical routing, fast modulation, continuous tuning, high-speed germanium photodiodes, and high-efficiency optical and electrical interfaces. However, silicon’s relatively weak electro-optic effects result in modulators with a significant footprint and thermo-optic tuning devices that require high power consumption, which are substantial impediments for very large-scale integration in silicon photonics. Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology can enhance silicon photonics with building blocks that are compact, low-loss, broadband, fast and require very low power consumption. Here, we introduce a silicon photonic MEMS platform consisting of high-performance nano-opto-electromechanical devices fully integrated alongside standard silicon photonics foundry components, with wafer-level sealing for long-term reliability, flip-chip bonding to redistribution interposers, and fibre-array attachment for high port count optical and electrical interfacing. Our experimental demonstration of fundamental silicon photonic MEMS circuit elements, including power couplers, phase shifters and wavelength-division multiplexing devices using standardized technology lifts previous impediments to enable scaling to very large photonic integrated circuits for applications in telecommunications, neuromorphic computing, sensing, programmable photonics, and quantum computing.