PHOTONIC CHIP, FIELD PROGRAMMABLE PHOTONIC ARRAY AND PROGRAMMABLE CIRCUIT
20200209473 · 2020-07-02
Inventors
- José Capmany Francoy (Valencia, ES)
- Ivana Gasulla Mestre (Valencia, ES)
- Daniel PÉREZ LÓPEZ (Valencia, ES)
Cpc classification
G02B6/29353
PHYSICS
G02B6/2804
PHYSICS
H03K19/14
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/12007
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to a photonic chip realized by combining at least one Programmable Photonics Analog Block (PPAB) and at least one Reconfigurable Photonic Interconnection (RPI) implemented over a photonic chip that is capable of implementing one or various simultaneous photonics circuits and/or linear multipart transformations by the appropriate programming of its resources (i.e. PPABs and RPIs) and the selection of its input and output ports. The invention also relates to a field-programmable photonic array (FPPA) comprising at least a programmable circuit based on tunable beamsplitters with independent coupling and phase-sifting configuration and peripheral high-performance building blocks.
Claims
1. A photonic chip comprising the following, implemented via a photonic chip: a) at least one programmable photonic analogue block with no resonant elements, and b) at least one reconfigurable photonic interconnection with no resonant elements.
2. The photonic chip of claim 1, wherein the at least one reconfigurable photonic interconnection comprises at least two photonic waveguide elements.
3. The photonic chip of claim 2, wherein the photonic waveguide element is configured to allow propagation in both directions.
4. The photonic chip of claim 2, wherein the photonic waveguide element is configured to be programmable to set the lightpath in an arrangement.
5. The photonic chip of claim 1, wherein the at least one programmable photonic analogue block comprises at least two input ports and two output ports described by a unitary 22 rotation matrix of a special unitary group of degree 2, comprising four components, with different phase relationships among its four components; wherein the unitary 22 rotation matrix is concatenable in several dispositions to yield any arbitrary 22 unitary matrix.
6. The photonic chip of claim 5, further comprising a tunable coupler with phase shifting capabilities, wherein the at least one programmable photonic analogue block is capable of independently configuring an arbitrary splitting ratio K (0<=K<=1) and a common phase shift .sub.PPAB between a least one input port and two output ports.
7. The photonic chip of claim 2, wherein the at least one reconfigurable photonic interconnection is configured to provide an independent and tunable differential phase shifting over a common value .sub.RPI to two optical waveguide input fields of the at least two photonic waveguide elements according to the following transmission array:
8. The photonic chip of claim 1, wherein the at least one programmable photonic analogue block and the at least one reconfigurable photonic interconnection are configured to be implemented by way of a series of photonic waveguide elements developed on a photonic chip substrate.
9. A field programmable photonic array comprising at least two photonic chips according to claim 1.
10. A photonic integrated circuit comprising programmable tunable couplers for the interconnection of at least two programmable photonic chips as defined in claim 9 that use the programmable tunable couplers as their primitive element to configure interferometric structures.
11. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10 wherein the programmable tunable couplers are interconnectable in such a way that allows a configuration of optical cavities and feed-forward and feedbackward interferometric structures using the tunable couplers with additional phase configuration as their primitive element.
12. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 11, wherein the field programmable photonic array is interconnected to high-performance building blocks configured to perform basic optical processing tasks as: optical amplification, optical sources, electro-optical modulation, opto-electronic photodetection, optical absorption and delay line arrays, optical wavelength and polarization (de)multiplexing, optical routing.
13. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 11, wherein the field programmable photonic array is interconnected to high-performance building blocks configured to performs wavelength multiplexing/demultiplexing of light either in a spectral cyclic or non-cyclic way.
14. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10, comprising programmable photonic analogue blocks and reconfigurable photonic interconnections design implemented by a non-resonant interferometer of type Mach-Zehnder.
15. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10, comprising programmable photonic analogue blocks and reconfigurable photonic interconnections design implemented by a non-resonant interferometer of type Mach-Zehnder with two arms of equal length.
16. (canceled)
17. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10, comprising programmable photonic analogue blocks and reconfigurable photonic interconnections design implemented by a non-resonant dual-drive directional coupler.
18. (canceled)
19. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10, wherein a programmable photonic analogue blocks and reconfigurable photonic interconnections comprise a plurality of phase and amplitude tuners that are based on: MEMS, thermo-optic effects, electro-optic effects, opto-mechanics or electro-capacitive effects.
20. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10, wherein programmable photonic analogue blocks and reconfigurable photonic interconnections define waveguide mesh arrangements that are distributed in a uniform topology.
21. The photonic integrated circuit of claim 10, wherein programmable photonic analogue blocks and reconfigurable photonic interconnections define waveguide mesh arrangements that are distributed in a non-uniform topology.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021] In order to complement the description being made and with the object of helping to better understand the characteristics of the invention, in accordance with a preferred practical embodiment thereof, said description is accompanied, as an integral part thereof, by a set of figures where, in an illustrative and non-limiting manner, the following has been represented:
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PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
[0036] In a preferred embodiment of the object of the invention, a device is provided as shown in
[0037] The independent operation of the PPAB is illustrated in
[0038] The PPAB is a 22 photonic component capable of independently configuring a common tunable phase shift .sub.PPAB and tunable optical power splitting ratio K=sin (0<=K<=1) between its optical waveguide input fields and its output optical waveguide output fields. Two propagation directions are possible; the first is from the left and top ports to the right and bottom ports and is characterized by any of the two following transmission arrays:
[0039] Where .sub.0, .sub.1, and .sub.2 represent the zero, first and second Pauli matrices. Both can be changed by means of two external control signals (electronic, mechanic, acoustic) by way of a linear relationship. The second is from the right and bottom ports to the left and top ports and is characterized by the following transmission array:
[0040] Once again, modes of operation and similar color codes can be defined for PPAB of the B, C and D type.
[0041] It is assumed that the RPI elements provide a lossless tunable phase change and its combination with the PPAB elements provides an extra degree of flexibility in the 22 transmission array.
[0042] The RPI elements of the optical waveguide can provide an independent and tunable differential phase shifting over a common value .sub.RPI to the two input and/or output waveguides which access the PPAB. For example, and referring to the left part of
[0043] Where .sub.3 represents the third Pauli matrix. The combined action of a PPAB element and its preceding RPI element can be converted at least in the two following manners:
[0044] Where the common phase factor is given by =.sub.RPI+.sub.PPAB.
[0045] Similarly, the combined action of a PPAB element and its succeeding RPI element (which is shown in the right part of
[0046] By means of suitable programming and the concatenation of successive RPI+PPAB and/or PPAB+RPI units, the FPPA can implement complex autonomous and/or parallel photonic circuits and signal processing transformations by discretizing conventional optical processing circuits into RPI and PPAB units.
[0047] In particular, this concept is illustrated by means of three generic designs which are represented in
[0048] The field-programmable photonic array (FPPA) according to the invention is an array of uncommitted elements that can be interconnected according to a user's specifications configured for a wide variety of applications. An FPPA combines the programmability of the most basic reconfigurable photonic integrated circuits in a scalable interconnection structure, allowing programmable circuits with much higher processing density. Thus, processing complexity comes from the interconnectivity.
[0049] The left part of
[0050] Technology mapping phase transforms the optimized network into a circuit that consists of a restricted set of circuit elements (FPPA processing blocks). This is done by selecting pieces of the network that can each be implemented by one of the available basic circuit elements, and specifying how these elements are to be interconnected. This will determine the total number of processing blocks required for the targeted implementation.
[0051] Then, a decision about the placement follows, assigning each processing block to a specific location in the FPPA. At that moment, the global routing is done by choosing the processing units that will perform as access lightpaths. In contrast to FPGA, this structure does not physically differentiate between processing blocks and Interconnection resources. Formerly, the processing block configurations are chosen correspondingly and performance calculation and design verification is carried out. It can be done either physically by feeding all the necessary configuration data to the programming units to configure the final chip or by employing accurate models of the FPPA. At each step it is possible to run an optimization process that might decide to re-configure any of the previous steps.
[0052] From the aforementioned description it can be appreciated that the FPPA involves not only the physical hardware of the photonic and control electronic tier but also it is composed of a software layer (see upper right part of
[0053] The steps contained in the generic design flow can be done automatically by the software layer, by the user, or a mixture of the two, depending on the autonomy and the capabilities of the FPPA. In addition, a failure in any of the steps will require an iterative process till the specifications are accomplished successfully. Additional parallel optimization process (mainly self-winding), enable robust operation, self-healing attributes and additional processing power to the physical device.
[0054] Similarly to modern FPGA families, FPPA can include peripheral and internal high-performance blocks (HPB) to expand its capabilities to include higher level functionality fixed into the chip. This is shown schematically in the lower right part of
[0055] A special case of HPB is an interconnection of the arrangement of basic processing units with input/output wavelength multiplexing/demultiplexing devices, either of which can be spectrally cyclic, or non-cyclic. As illustrated in
Operation Examples
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Physical Implementation
[0057] The physical implementation of the FPPA device calls for an integrated optics approach either based on silicon photonics platform or a hybrid/heterogeneous III-V and Silicon photonics platforms.
[0058] As for the PPAB elements, the currently available photonics technology options are listed in the upper part of