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Monolithic piezoelectric control of soliton microcombs

Authors :
Liu, Junqiu
Tian, Hao
Lucas, Erwan
Raja, Arslan S.
Lihachev, Grigory
Wang, Rui Ning
He, Jijun
Liu, Tianyi
Anderson, Miles H.
Weng, Wenle
Bhave, Sunil A.
Kippenberg, Tobias J.
Source :
Nature; July 2020, Vol. 583 Issue: 7816 p385-390, 6p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

High-speed actuation of laser frequency1is critical in applications using lasers and frequency combs2,3, and is a prerequisite for phase locking, frequency stabilization and stability transfer among optical carriers. For example, high-bandwidth feedback control of frequency combs is used in optical-frequency synthesis4, frequency division5and optical clocks6. Soliton microcombs7,8have emerged as chip-scale frequency comb sources, and have been used in system-level demonstrations9,10. Yet integrated microcombs using thermal heaters have limited actuation bandwidths11,12of up to 10 kilohertz. Consequently, megahertz-bandwidth actuation and locking of microcombs have only been achieved with off-chip bulk component modulators. Here we demonstrate high-speed soliton microcomb actuation using integrated piezoelectric components13. By monolithically integrating AlN actuators14on ultralow-loss Si3N4photonic circuits15, we demonstrate voltage-controlled soliton initiation, tuning and stabilization with megahertz bandwidth. The AlN actuators use 300 nanowatts of power and feature bidirectional tuning, high linearity and low hysteresis. They exhibit a flat actuation response up to 1 megahertz—substantially exceeding bulk piezo tuning bandwidth—that is extendable to higher frequencies by overcoming coupling to acoustic contour modes of the chip. Via synchronous tuning of the laser and the microresonator, we exploit this ability to frequency-shift the optical comb spectrum (that is, to change the comb’s carrier-envelope offset frequency) and make excursions beyond the soliton existence range. This enables a massively parallel frequency-modulated engine16,17for lidar (light detection and ranging), with increased frequency excursion, lower power and elimination of channel distortions resulting from the soliton Raman self-frequency shift. Moreover, by modulating at a rate matching the frequency of high-overtone bulk acoustic resonances18, resonant build-up of bulk acoustic energy allows a 14-fold reduction of the required driving voltage, making it compatible with CMOS (complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor) electronics. Our approach endows soliton microcombs with integrated, ultralow-power and fast actuation, expanding the repertoire of technological applications of microcombs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
583
Issue :
7816
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs53779366
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2465-8