Stimulated Forward Brillouin Scattering in Subwavelength Silicon Membranes
Abstract
Brillouin scattering enables efficient and coherent conversion between optical photons and gigahertz-frequency phonons. Integrated circuits that harness this nonlinear interaction have immense potential for signal processing, quantum transduction, and sensing applications. However, achieving strong overlap and tight confinement of optical and mechanical modes in silicon nanophotonic waveguides remains a significant challenge. Here, we propose and demonstrate a novel strategy that enables independent control of optical and mechanical modes in periodically segmented silicon waveguides. Our approach combines two distinct periodic lattices: one with a period shorter than half of the optical wavelength, providing light guiding by metamaterial-induced index contrast, and another that creates a complete phononic bandgap confining acoustic modes. This dual-lattice strategy opens new degrees of freedom to optimize optomechanical confinement and coupling simultaneously. Based on this approach, we experimentally demonstrate remarkably high Brillouin gain of GB=2673 W-1m-1, resulting in a Stokes gain of 3 dB and an anti-Stokes loss of 4 dB with 6.4 MHz mechanical linewidth. These results illustrate the potential of subwavelength silicon metamaterials for engineering on-chip optomechanical interactions.
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