High performance directly modulated lasers: device physics

Author(s):  
J. Kenton White ◽  
Gordon Knight ◽  
Suhit Das ◽  
Richard J. Finlay ◽  
Trevor Jones ◽  
...  
Micromachines ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Shin ◽  
Suk-Ho Choi

Graphene transparent conductive electrodes are highly attractive for photodetector (PD) applications due to their excellent electrical and optical properties. The emergence of graphene/semiconductor hybrid heterostructures provides a platform useful for fabricating high-performance optoelectronic devices, thereby overcoming the inherent limitations of graphene. Here, we review the studies of PDs based on graphene/semiconductor hybrid heterostructures, including device physics/design, performance, and process technologies for the optimization of PDs. In the last section, existing technologies and future challenges for PD applications of graphene/semiconductor hybrid heterostructures are discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (10) ◽  
pp. 107307
Author(s):  
Ke WEI ◽  
Shu YANG ◽  
Jing CHEN ◽  
ZhiKai TANG ◽  
XinYu LIU ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 354-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Feng Liao ◽  
Wu-Qiang Wu ◽  
Yong Jiang ◽  
Jun-Xing Zhong ◽  
Lianzhou Wang ◽  
...  

This review summarizes recent advances in the carrier transport layer-free perovskite solar cells and elucidates the fundamental carrier dynamics, heterojunction merits and device physics towards mysterious high performance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 107401
Author(s):  
Bin Wang ◽  
Sheng Hu ◽  
Yue Feng ◽  
Peng Li ◽  
Hui-Yong Hu ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Sun ◽  
Gongyuan Zhao ◽  
Pengfei Zhang ◽  
Michael Wallace ◽  
Frank Bello ◽  
...  

Photonics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Nikolaos-Panteleimon (Pandelis) Diamantopoulos ◽  
Suguru Yamaoka ◽  
Takuro Fujii ◽  
Hidetaka Nishi ◽  
Koji Takeda ◽  
...  

Near-future upgrades of intra data center networks and high-performance computing systems would require optical interconnects capable of operating at beyond 100 Gbps/lane. In order for this evolution to be achieved in a sustainable way, high-speed yet energy-efficient transceivers are in need. Towards this direction we have previously demonstrated directly-modulated lasers (DMLs) capable of operating at 50 Gbps/lane with sub-pJ/bit efficiencies based on our novel membrane-III-V-on-Si technology. However, there exists an inherent tradeoff between modulation speed and power consumption due to the carrier-photon dynamics in DMLs. In this work, we alleviate this tradeoff by introducing photon–photon resonance dynamics in our energy-efficient membrane DMLs-on-Si design and demonstrate a device with a maximum 3-dB bandwidth of 47.5 GHz. This denotes a bandwidth increase of more than 2x times compared to our previous membrane DMLs-on-Si. Moreover, the DML is capable of delivering 60-GBaud PAM-4 signals under Ethernet’s KP4-FEC threshold (net data rate of 113.42 Gbps) over 2-km of standard single-mode fiber transmission. DC energy-efficiencies of 0.17 pJ/bit at 25 °C and 0.34 pJ/bit at 50 °C have been achieved for the > 100-Gbps signals. Deploying such DMLs in an integrated multichannel transceiver should ensure a smooth evolution towards Terabit-class Ethernet links and on-board optics subsystems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 251 ◽  
pp. 03030
Author(s):  
Seth R. Johnson ◽  
Stefano C. Tognini ◽  
Philippe Canal ◽  
Thomas Evans ◽  
Soon Yung Jun ◽  
...  

Celeritas is a new computational transport code designed for high-performance simulation of high-energy physics detectors. This work describes some of its current capabilities and the design choices that enable the rapid development of efficient on-device physics. The abstractions that underpin the code design facilitate low-level performance tweaks that require no changes to the higher-level physics code. We evaluate a set of independent changes that together yield an almost 40% speedup over the original GPU code for a net performance increase of 220× for a single GPU over a single CPU running 8.4M tracks on a small demonstration physics app.


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