4.7 Article

Broadband Electro-Optical Crossbar Switches Using Low-Loss Ge2Sb2Se4Te1 Phase Change Material

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 13, Pages 3183-3191

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2019.2912669

Keywords

Directional coupler switches; electro-optical switches; integrated photonic devices; optical switching devices; phase change materials

Funding

  1. Air Force Office of Scientific Research [FA9550-17-1-0354]
  2. Fondo di Ricerca di Ateneo
  3. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency [D18AP00070]

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This theoretical modeling and simulation paper presents designs and projected performance of non-volatile broadband on-chip 1 x 2 and 2 x 2 electro-optical switches operating in the telecommunication C-band and based on the silicon-on-insulator technological platform. These optical switches consist of an asymmetric two-waveguide directional coupler and a symmetric three-waveguide directional coupler, in which the optical phase change material Ge2Sb2Se4Te1 (GSST) is the top cladding layer for one of the silicon strip waveguides. Reversible crossbar switching is attained by the amorphous (Am) to crystalline (Cr) and Cr-to-Am phase transitions in the GSST induced by heating the GSST in contact with an indium tin oxide (ITO) microstrip through Joule heating. We examined device performance in terms of mid-band insertion loss (IL), crosstalk (CT), and 0.3-dB IL bandwidth (BW). The 2 x 2 results were IL=-0.018 dB, CT< 31.3 dB, and BW= 58 nm for the coupling length L-c of 15.4 mu m, and IL=0.046 dB, CT < 38.1 dB, and BW= 70 nm for the coupling length L-c of 17.4 mu m. Simulations of the 1 x 2 devices at 16.7-mu m L-c revealed that IL = 0.083 dB and CT < 12.8 dB along with an expanded BW of 95 nm. Thermal simulations showed that a 5-V pulse train applied to 10(19)-cm(-3) doped ITO would produce crystallization; however, the process of amorphization required a 24-V pulse of 2.9-mu s duration to raise the GSST temperature above the melting temperature of 900 K.

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