CaltechTHESIS
  A Caltech Library Service

Silicon Microdisk Resonators for Nonlinear Optics and Dynamics

Citation

Johnson, Thomas James (2009) Silicon Microdisk Resonators for Nonlinear Optics and Dynamics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/SBDK-7J52. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-03232009-120417

Abstract

Silicon is incredibly well-studied as an electronic material. Since the out-migration of William Noyce, Gordon Moore, and the rest of the original Fairchild Semiconductor class from Shockley Semiconductor, silicon has only grown in prominence. Untold billions have been expended on research, development, and manufacture, and now silicon is perhaps the most well-controlled commercial material on Earth. For all that, the use of silicon as a mechanical material, though envisioned in the late 1950s, largely became viable only after the advent of large-scale silicon processing for microelectronics. As an optical material, silicon also has a long pedigree, with most of the positive focus on its excellent optical transparency and the enormous potential for improvement residing in its lack of effective emission.

This thesis concerns an alternate route to the generation of light in silicon: the nonlinear route. Resonant elements play a critical role in making this viable. The ability to build up optical intensity in the confined volume of a microresonator reduces the input power required to achieve a given energy density. Silicon also has certain excellent nonlinear properties: a large Raman gain coefficient, for example, and an appreciable Kerr effect. Unfortunately, silicon also exhibits significant two-photon absorption (TPA) in the convenient telecommunications wavelength bands. As such, the build-up of optical energy in silion may also be accompanied by a build-up of TPA-induced free-carrier populations. These populations may serve to limit the efficiency of nonlinear processes or to generate additional nonlinear behavior in their interactions with optical fields.

Thus two important stepping-stones on the way to the low-power,low-footprint use of silicon as an optical material are: the need to reduce optical losses in the optical elements, and to reduce or modify the populations of free carriers generated in the nonlinear optics regime. This thesis will present design considerations of, fabrication techniques developed for, and characterization techniques of high-Q silicon microresonators. In the course of this work, we have created silicon microdisk resonators with quality factors as high as 5×10^6, and high-Q silicon microdisks with free-carrier lifetimes in the deep subnanosecond regime (Q=5–6×10^5 and carrier lifetimes ≤ 240 ps). These results, with no indication that higher quality factors or shorter carrier lifetimes are not possible in similar structures, indicate that coherent, CW optical generation in passive silicon microresonators is approaching feasibility.

Item Type:Thesis (Dissertation (Ph.D.))
Subject Keywords:silicon photonics
Degree Grantor:California Institute of Technology
Division:Engineering and Applied Science
Major Option:Applied Physics
Thesis Availability:Public (worldwide access)
Research Advisor(s):
  • Painter, Oskar J.
Thesis Committee:
  • Scherer, Axel (chair)
  • Vahala, Kerry J.
  • Painter, Oskar J.
  • Tai, Yu-Chong
Defense Date:17 March 2009
Record Number:CaltechETD:etd-03232009-120417
Persistent URL:https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-03232009-120417
DOI:10.7907/SBDK-7J52
Default Usage Policy:No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided.
ID Code:1079
Collection:CaltechTHESIS
Deposited By: Imported from ETD-db
Deposited On:28 Apr 2009
Last Modified:26 Nov 2019 19:13

Thesis Files

[img]
Preview
PDF (TJRJ_thesis_submitted.pdf) - Final Version
See Usage Policy.

7MB

Repository Staff Only: item control page