Broadband Chromatic Dispersion of Thermo-refractive Coefficients and its Impact in Silicon Nitride Nonlinear Photonics
Abstract
The thermo-refractive effect is a cornerstone of frequency and phase tuning in photonic integrated circuits. In particular, it enables control of phase-matching for integrated nonlinear processes. Chromatic dispersion of the group and effective refractive indices and modal confinement are standard considerations in design, but material thermo-refractive coefficients (TRCs) are typically taken to be fixed for the guiding and cladding materials. Here, we demonstrate that the assumption of non-dispersive TRCs across an octave of bandwidth between the telecom and visible results in a significant discrepancy between measured and simulated resonance frequencies of an integrated Si3N4/SiO2 microring resonator. We uncover a 7 % variation in Si3N4 and SiO2 material TRCs across this range, finding that the variation of dneff /dT from material TRCs is 1.3 times that from modal confinement. This accurately matches a temperature-dependent Lorentz oscillator model describing their chromatic dispersion. By integrating these dispersive TRCs into a multi-physics finite-element model, we achieve precise correspondence with experimentally measured temperature-dependent resonance frequency shifts across the octave, including in the context of second harmonic generation devices. Our results provide a physical framework and a universal predictive workflow for the design of high-efficiency, multi-wavelength nonlinear optical processes, fundamentally improving the thermal control of integrated photonic devices.
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