Nano–opto-electro-mechanical switches operated at CMOS-level voltages

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Abstract

Combining reprogrammable optical networks with complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) electronics is expected to provide a platform for technological developments in on-chip integrated optoelectronics. We demonstrate how opto-electro-mechanical effects in micrometer-scale hybrid photonic-plasmonic structures enable light switching under CMOS voltages and low optical losses (0.1 decibel). Rapid (for example, tens of nanoseconds) switching is achieved by an electrostatic, nanometer-scale perturbation of a thin, and thus low-mass, gold membrane that forms an air-gap hybrid photonic-plasmonic waveguide. Confinement of the plasmonic portion of the light to the variable-height air gap yields a strong opto-electro-mechanical effect, while photonic confinement of the rest of the light minimizes optical losses. The demonstrated hybrid architecture provides a route to develop applications for CMOS-integrated, reprogrammable optical systems such as optical neural networks for deep learning.

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APA

Haffner, C., Joerg, A., Doderer, M., Mayor, F., Chelladurai, D., Fedoryshyn, Y., … Leuthold, J. (2019). Nano–opto-electro-mechanical switches operated at CMOS-level voltages. Science, 366(6467), 860–864. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aay8645

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