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Anneal-free ultra-low loss silicon nitride integrated photonics

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posted on 2023-09-12, 16:00 authored by Debapam Bose, Mark W. Harrington, Andrei Isichenko, Kaikai Liu, Jiawei Wang, Zachary L. Newman, Daniel J. Blumenthal
Heterogeneous and monolithic integration of the versatile low loss silicon nitride platform with low temperature materials such as silicon electronics and photonics, III-V compound semiconductors, lithium niobate, organics, and glasses, has been inhibited by the need for high temperature annealing as well as the need for different process flows for thin and thick waveguides. New techniques are needed to maintain the state-of-the-art losses, nonlinear properties, and CMOS compatible processes while enabling this next generation of 3D silicon nitride integration. We report a significant advance in silicon nitride integrated photonics, demonstrating the lowest losses to date for an anneal-free process at a maximum temperature of 250 C, with the same deuterated silane based fabrication flow, for nitride and oxide, for an order of magnitude range in nitride thickness without requiring stress mitigation or polishing. We report record low losses for anneal-free nitride core and oxide cladding, enabling 1.77 dB/m loss and 14.9 million Q for 80 nm nitride core waveguides, more than half an order magnitude lower loss than previously reported 270 C processes, and 8.66 dB/m loss and 4.03 million Q for 800 nm thick nitride. We demonstrate laser stabilization with over 4 orders of magnitude frequency noise reduction using a thin nitride reference cavity. And using a thick nitride micro-resonator, we demonstrate parametric gain and Optical Parametric Oscillation (OPO) with the lowest reported OPO threshold per unit resonator length for low temperature fabricated nitride, and supercontinuum generation over two octaves. These results represent a significant step towards a uniform ultra-low loss silicon nitride homogeneous and heterogeneous platform for both thin and thick waveguides capable of linear and nonlinear photonic circuits and integration with low temperature materials and processes.

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