Non-Volatile Hybrid Optical Phase Shifter Driven by a Ferroelectric Transistor

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Abstract

Optical phase shifters are essential elements in photonic integrated circuits (PICs) and function as a direct interface to program the PICs. Non-volatile phase shifters, which can retain information without a power supply, are highly desirable for low-power static operations. Here a non-volatile optical phase shifter is demonstrated by driving a III-V/Si hybrid metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) phase shifter with a ferroelectric field-effect transistor (FeFET) operating in the source follower mode. Owing to the various polarization states in the FeFET, multistate non-volatile phase shifts up to 1.25π are obtained with CMOS-compatible operation voltages and low switching energy up to 3.3 nJ. Furthermore, a crossbar array architecture is proposed to simplify the control of non-volatile phase shifters in large-scale PICs and verify its feasibility by confirming the selective write-in operation of a targeted FeFET with a negligible disturbance to the others. This work paves the way for realizing large-scale non-volatile programmable PICs for emerging computing applications such as deep learning and quantum computing.

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APA

Tang, R., Watanabe, K., Fujita, M., Tang, H., Akazawa, T., Toprasertpong, K., … Takenaka, M. (2023). Non-Volatile Hybrid Optical Phase Shifter Driven by a Ferroelectric Transistor. Laser and Photonics Reviews, 17(11). https://doi.org/10.1002/lpor.202300279

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