Patent classifications
G02F2201/126
Balanced Mach-Zehnder modulator
An apparatus for modulating a beam of light with balanced push-pull mechanism. The apparatus includes a first waveguide comprising a first PN junction on a silicon-on-insulator substrate and a second waveguide comprising a second PN junction on the silicon-on-insulator substrate. The second PN junction is a replica of the first PN junction shifted with a distance. The apparatus further includes a first source electrode and a first ground electrode coupled respectively with the first PN junction and a second source electrode and a second ground electrode coupled respectively with the second PN junction. The apparatus additionally includes a third ground electrode disposed near the second PN junction at the distance away from the second ground electrode, wherein the first ground electrode, the second ground electrode, and the third ground electrode are commonly grounded to have both PN junctions subjected to a substantially same electric field varied in ground-source-ground pattern.
Differential TWE MZM driver for silicon photonics
A differential TWE MZM includes a differential driver, first and second capacitors, and first and second terminations. The differential driver includes a first differential output and a second differential output that collectively form a differential pair. The first differential output is DC coupled to a first arm optical phase shifter of a TWE MZM. The second differential output is DC coupled to a second arm optical phase shifter of the TWE MZM. The first capacitor AC couples the second differential output to the first arm optical phase shifter. The second capacitor AC couples the first differential output to the second arm optical phase shifter. The first and second terminations are coupled to, respectively, the first or second arm optical phase shifter.
Controlled-capacitance full-depletion interdigitated pin modulator
A method of modulating an optical input with a radio frequency (RF) signal, an interdigitated modulator, and an electro-optical modulator including the interdigitated modulator are described. The method includes splitting the optical input to a first optical input and a second optical input, traversing a first region and a second region, respectively, with the first optical input and the second optical input, and modulating the first optical input with the RF signal in the first region. The method also includes controlling propagation speed of the RF signal in the first region, controlling RF line impedance in the first region, and controlling an optical loss of the first optical input in the first region.
Controlled-capacitance full-depletion interdigitated pin modulator
A method of modulating an optical input with a radio frequency (RF) signal, an interdigitated modulator, and an electro-optical modulator including the interdigitated modulator are described. The method includes splitting the optical input to a first optical input and a second optical input, traversing a first region and a second region, respectively, with the first optical input and the second optical input, and modulating the first optical input with the RF signal in the first region. The method also includes controlling propagation speed of the RF signal in the first region, controlling RF line impedance in the first region, and controlling an optical loss of the first optical input in the first region.
Optical modulator and optical transmitter
An optical modulator includes a package that accommodates therein a first substrate and a second substrate different from the first substrate, and outside the package, a flexible circuit board. The first substrate has plural optical modulating units disposed thereon in parallel and each including a Mach-Zehnder optical waveguide. Plural first signal line paths corresponding to the optical modulating units are disposed on the second substrate. Plural second signal line paths corresponding to the optical modulating units are disposed on the flexible circuit board. Electrical lengths of the second signal line paths are different from one another. Electrical lengths of signal paths that span from input ends of the second signal line paths corresponding to the optical modulating units to base points on signal electrodes, via the first signal line paths, are equal to one another.
BALANCED DIFFERENTIAL MODULATION SCHEMES FOR SILICON PHOTONIC MODULATORS
The invention relates to photonic differential modulators and more particularly different electrode configurations for differential driving schemes for reducing the driving voltage for a given phase shift and device footprint. The embodiments comprise of two reverse-biased p-n junctions driven in a push-pull configuration from signal (S) to signal bar (S-bar). The first embodiment shares the S-bar electrode between two p-n junctions to reduce the device footprint at the expense of difficult impedance matching. The second embodiment does not contain any shared electrode and instead adds additional electrodes for the sake of easier impedance matching. Specifically, the second embodiment decouples the two p-n junctions along with their respective transmission lines for ease of impedance matching. The third embodiment shares both the S and S-bar electrodes through an interleaved electrode design to reduce the device footprint, and makes impedance matching easier by slow-wave effect on the transmission lines.
Differential optical waveguide modulator
A planar electro-optic Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) includes two optical waveguide arms and three drive electrodes extending along the optical waveguide arms to modulate light propagating therein. A middle one of the drive electrodes is between the two optical waveguide arms, and the two optical waveguide arms are between outer ones of the drive electrodes. An electrical drive circuit is connected to provide first modulation signals to the two outer ones of the drive electrodes and a second modulation signal to the middle one of the drive electrodes, wherein the second modulation signal is voltage-inverted relative to the first modulation signals.