The performance evolution of telecommunication networks, computing systems and integrated circuits requires increasing communication bandwidth at all interconnect levels. Also, the power efficiency, i.e. the energy required to transfer data, must be considerably decreased. The use of silicon photonics has been well identified in all prospective reports as a means to overcome electrical interconnect bandwidth and power efficiency limitations. This research domain has exhibited a remarkable rate of development, with current advances, which were inconceivable 10 years ago. This evolution is largely based on the vision that silicon as a mature integration platform can bring photonic integrated circuits closest to electronic circuits, driven by the economy of scale of generic wafer-scale integration technologies. However, despite the demonstration of high performance silicon modulators, germanium photodetectors, and III-V lasers on silicon, their integration in a common chip is highly challenging due to the different materials and technologies involved and it is far from being cost-effective. In addition, wideband silicon modulators require bias swings of several volts to achieve good modulation behavior, which result in high power consumption and considerably degrade the global energy impact of the circuit. Furthermore, current Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) photonic platform exhibits some major drawbacks for the development of reliable and robust technology for a large range of applications: i) No second order nonlinearity because of its centro-symmetry, i.e. no Pockels effect, (ii) high two photon absorption (TPA) leading to free carrier absorption (FCA), increasing the overall optical loss and decrease nonlinear optical efficiency, (iii) Poor efficiency in light detection in the telecom wavelength range.
In this silicon photonics ecosystem, the POPSTAR project will address a new route to make key advances in the development of low power consumption multi-wavelength high-speed communication circuits based on second- and third-order nonlinear optical effects in silicon. The original idea of the project is to generate strains in sub-wavelength silicon photonic nano-structures leading to significant breakthroughs in second-order nonlinearities efficiency (Pockels effect) and in third-order nonlinearities.