Kristy J. Kormondy, Youri Popoff, et al.
Nanotechnology
Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) operating at cryogenic temperatures are fundamental building blocks required to achieve scalable quantum computing and cryogenic computing technologies1,2. Silicon PICs have matured for room-temperature applications, but their cryogenic performance is limited by the absence of efficient low-temperature electro-optic modulation. Here we demonstrate electro-optic switching and modulation from room temperature down to 4 K by using the Pockels effect in integrated barium titanate (BaTiO3) devices3. We investigate the temperature dependence of the nonlinear optical properties of BaTiO3, showing an effective Pockels coefficient of 200 pm V−1 at 4 K. The fabricated devices show an electro-optic bandwidth of 30 GHz, ultralow-power tuning that is 109 times more efficient than thermal tuning, and high-speed data modulation at 20 Gbps. Our results demonstrate a missing component for cryogenic PICs, removing major roadblocks for the realization of cryogenic-compatible systems in the field of quantum computing, supercomputing and sensing, and for interfacing those systems with instrumentation at room temperature.
Kristy J. Kormondy, Youri Popoff, et al.
Nanotechnology
Viacheslav Snigirev, Annina Riedhauser, et al.
ECOC 2022
Andreas Messner, Felix Eltes, et al.
Journal of Lightwave Technology
Stefan Abel, Thilo Stöferle, et al.
CLEO/Europe-EQEC 2015