Publication | Closed Access
Transferrable monolithic III-nitride photonic circuit for multifunctional optoelectronics
42
Citations
23
References
2017
Year
Dominant Electroluminescence PeakEngineeringDevice IntegrationIntegrated PhotonicsSingle ChipProgrammable PhotonicsNanoelectronicsPhotonic Integrated CircuitPhotonicsElectrical EngineeringOptical InterconnectsAluminum Gallium NitrideMicroelectronicsPhotonic DeviceMultifunctional OptoelectronicsApplied PhysicsGan Power DeviceTechnologyOptoelectronicsSuspended Iii-nitride Membrane
A monolithic III-nitride photonic circuit with integrated functionalities was implemented by integrating multiple components with different functions into a single chip. In particular, the III-nitride-on-silicon platform is used as it integrates a transmitter, a waveguide, and a receiver into a suspended III-nitride membrane via a wafer-level procedure. Here, a 0.8-mm-diameter suspended device architecture is directly transferred from silicon to a foreign substrate by mechanically breaking the support beams. The transferred InGaN/GaN multiple-quantum-well diode (MQW-diode) exhibits a turn-on voltage of 2.8 V with a dominant electroluminescence peak at 453 nm. The transmitter and receiver share an identical InGaN/GaN MQW structure, and the integrated photonic circuit inherently works for on-chip power monitoring and in-plane visible light communication. The wire-bonded monolithic photonic circuit on glass experimentally demonstrates in-plane data transmission at 120 Mb/s, paving the way for diverse applications in intelligent displays, in-plane light communication, flexible optical sensors, and wearable III-nitride optoelectronics.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1