• DocumentCode
    25941
  • Title

    A Monolithically-Integrated Chip-to-Chip Optical Link in Bulk CMOS

  • Author

    Chen Sun ; Georgas, Michael ; Orcutt, Jason ; Moss, Benjamin ; Yu-Hsin Chen ; Shainline, Jeffrey ; Wade, Mark ; Mehta, Karan ; Nammari, Kareem ; Timurdogan, Erman ; Miller, Daniel ; Tehar-Zahav, Ofer ; Sternberg, Zvi ; Leu, Jonathan ; Chong, Johanna ; Baf

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
  • Volume
    50
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Apr-15
  • Firstpage
    828
  • Lastpage
    844
  • Abstract
    Silicon-photonics is an emerging technology that can overcome the tradeoffs faced by traditional electrical I/O. Due to ballooning development costs for advanced CMOS nodes, however, widespread adoption necessitates seamless photonics integration into mainstream processes, with as few process changes as possible. In this work, we demonstrate a silicon-photonic link with optical devices and electronics integrated on the same chip in a 0.18 μm bulk CMOS memory periphery process. To enable waveguides and optics in process-native polysilicon, we introduce deep-trench isolation, placed underneath to prevent optical mode leakage into the bulk silicon substrate, and implant-amorphization to reduce polysilicon loss. A resonant defect-trap photodetector using polysilicon eliminates need for germanium integration and completes the fully polysilicon-based photonics platform. Transceiver circuits take advantage of photonic device integration, achieving 350 fJ/b transmit and 71 μApp BER = 10-12 receiver sensitivity at 5 Gb/s. We show high fabrication uniformity and high-Q resonators, enabling dense wavelength-division multiplexing with 9-wavelength 45 Gb/s transmit/receive data-rates per waveguide/fiber. To combat perturbations to variation- and thermally-sensitive resonant devices, we demonstrate an on-chip thermal tuning feedback loop that locks the resonance to the laser wavelength. A 5 m optical chip-to-chip link achieves 5 Gb/s while consuming 3 pJ/b and 12 pJ/bit of circuit and optical energy, respectively.
  • Keywords
    CMOS integrated circuits; elemental semiconductors; integrated optics; isolation technology; monolithic integrated circuits; optical interconnections; optical links; silicon; wavelength division multiplexing; Si; ballooning development; bulk CMOS; deep-trench isolation; germanium integration; implant-amorphization; monolithically-integrated chip-to-chip optical link; on-chip thermal tuning feedback loop; optical devices; optical mode leakage; photonic device integration; polysilicon loss; polysilicon-based photonics platform; process-native polysilicon; resonant defect-trap photodetector; silicon-photonics; size 0.18 mum; size 5 m; transceiver circuits; wavelength division multiplexing; Modulation; Optical devices; Optical fiber communication; Optical losses; Optical receivers; Optical waveguides; Photonics; Memory; optical interconnects; optoelectronics; process integration; silicon-photonics; wireline transceivers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9200
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JSSC.2014.2382101
  • Filename
    7014312