Thermally Induced Refractive Index Trimming of Visible-Light Silicon Nitride Waveguides Using Suspended Heaters
Abstract
We demonstrate refractive index trimming of visible-light silicon nitride (SiN) waveguides using suspended heater structures. The thermal isolation of the suspended heaters enabled a semi-uniform temperature distribution with estimated temperatures of 350C in the waveguides without reaching potentially damaging temperatures in the titanium nitride resistive heaters. The thermal isolation also enabled trimming temperatures to be reached with a moderate power dissipation of 30 to 40 mW. At a wavelength of 561 nm, modal effective index changes up to -8.3 × 10-3 were observed following thermal trimming, and the index changes were stable over an observation period of 97 days. The devices were fabricated as part of our visible-light integrated photonics platform on 200-mm diameter silicon wafers. The suspended heaters also functioned as efficient thermo-optic phase shifters with power dissipation for a π phase shift of about 1.2-1.8 mW. The trimming method was applied to set the bias points of thermo-optic Mach-Zehnder interferometer switches to reduce the bias power of five devices from 0.29-2.32 mW to 0.1-0.16 mW. Thermal trimming at a wavelength of 445 nm was also demonstrated. Through material analysis before and after thermal treatment, we hypothesize that index trimming of the silica (SiO2) waveguide cladding may be a potential underlying mechanism. Additionally, via extrapolations of the measured trimming data, we estimate the thermal aging behavior of the SiN waveguides in the suspended heaters at lower (125 - 250C) operating temperatures.
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