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G. Roelkens, J. Brouckaert, J. Van Campenhout, D. Van Thourhout, R

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Presentation on theme: "G. Roelkens, J. Brouckaert, J. Van Campenhout, D. Van Thourhout, R"— Presentation transcript:

1 Heterogeneous Integration of III-V Active Devices on a Silicon-on-Insulator Photonic Platform
G. Roelkens, J. Brouckaert, J. Van Campenhout, D. Van Thourhout, R. Baets Photonics Research Group – Ghent University/IMEC Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, B-9000 Ghent – Belgium

2 Outline Introduction Die-to-wafer bonding for hetero-integration
Heterogeneously integrated laser diodes Heterogeneously integrated photodetectors Conclusions and outlook

3 Introduction Why combine silicon with III-V? silicon
 fall back on CMOS technology  high index contrast  no emission nor amplification, yet III-V  superb emission, amplification and detection  full active-passive integration is complex and expensive, still III-V on silicon  combine the best of two worlds  price: bonding technology does it work? can it turn into a manufacturing technology?

4 Introduction There are several ways to integrate III-V on SOI
Flip-chip integration of opto-electronic components  most rugged technology  testing of opto-electronic components in advance  slow sequential process (alignment accuracy)  low density of integration Hetero-epitaxial growth of III-V on silicon  collective process, high density of integration  mismatch in lattice constant, CTE, polar/non-polar  contamination and temperature budget Bonding of III-V epitaxial layers  sequential but fast integration process  high density of integration, collective processing  high quality epitaxial III-V layers

5 Outline Introduction Die-to-wafer bonding for hetero-integration
Heterogeneously integrated laser diodes Heterogeneously integrated photodetectors Conclusions and outlook

6 III-V/Silicon photonics
Bonding of III-V epitaxial layers Molecular die-to-wafer bonding Based on van der Waals attraction between wafer surfaces Adhesive die-to-wafer bonding Uses an adhesive layer as a glue to stick both surfaces Wafer-scale processing of III-V devices III-V die bonding (unprocessed) InP substrate removal SOI Waveguide wafer

7 III-V/Silicon photonics
Bonding of III-V epitaxial layers Molecular die-to-wafer bonding Based on van der Waals attraction between wafer surfaces Requires “atomic contact” between both surfaces - very sensitive to particles - very sensitive to roughness - very sensitive to contamination of surfaces Adhesive die-to-wafer bonding Uses an adhesive layer as a glue to stick both surfaces Requirements are more relaxed compared to Molecular - glue compensates for particles (some) - glue compensates for roughness (all) - glue allows (some) contamination of surfaces While established technology for SOI, III-Vs often do not meet the requirements for molecular bonding

8 DVS-BCB satisfies these requirements
Bonding Technology Requirements for the adhesive for bonding Optically transparent High thermal stability (post-bonding thermal budget) Low curing temperature (low thermal stress) No outgassing upon curing (void formation) Resistant to all kinds of chemicals Si CH3 O 1,3-divinyl-1,1,3,3-tetramethyldisiloxane-bisbenzocyclobutene 400C 250C <0.1dB/cm OK HCl,H2SO4,H2O2,… DVS-BCB satisfies these requirements

9 Solvent evap + prepolymerization DVS-BCB curing (pressurized)
Bonding Technology Overview of the bonding process Die/wafer cleaning most critical step in processing SOI wafer: standard clean – 1 Lifts off particles from surface and prevents redeposition InP/InGaAsP: removal of sacrificial InP/InGaAs layer pair DVS-BCB DVS-BCB Si-substrate SiO2 Si DVS-BCB DVS-BCB Wafer cleaning DVS-BCB coating Solvent evap + prepolymerization Die attachment DVS-BCB curing (pressurized)

10 Bonding Technology Overview of the bonding process Optical SOI wafer
Thinning: - mechanical grinding - wet etching till etch stop layer reached (HCl) After bonding After thinning Cross-section

11 InP/InGaAsP epitaxial layer stack InP-InGaAsP epitaxial layer stack
Bonding Technology Cross-sectional image of III-V/Silicon substrate InP/InGaAsP epitaxial layer stack InP-InGaAsP epitaxial layer stack DVS-BCB DVS-BCB Si Si WG SiO2 200nm Si SiO2 200nm

12 Towards integrated devices
Laser diodes and photodetectors have to be fabricated in bonded III-V layer and coupled to SOI circuit below What architecture is used for the laser diode / photodetector? How is light efficiently coupled between III-V and SOI layer? Performance degradation of bonded active devices? Silicon substrate Oxide buffer layer Silicon waveguide layer InP/InGaAsP layer stack

13 Outline Introduction Die-to-wafer bonding for hetero-integration
Heterogeneously integrated laser diodes Fabry-Perot lasers Microring lasers Heterogeneously integrated photodetectors Conclusions and outlook

14 Integrated Devices: laser diode
Integrated laser diodes Fabry-Perot laser cavity by etching InP/InGaAsP laser facets Inverted adiabatic taper coupling approach Laser beam

15 Integrated Devices: laser diode
Integrated laser diodes Fabry-Perot laser cavity by etching InP/InGaAsP laser facets Inverted adiabatic taper coupling approach

16 Integrated Devices: laser diode
Integrated laser diodes Only pulsed operation due to high thermal resistivity DVS-BCB Integration of a heat sink to improve heat dissipation Continuous wave operation achieved this way

17 Integrated Devices: laser diode
Integrated laser diodes Microlasers SiO2/BCB ts = 0nm ts = 50nm ts = 100nm microdisk diameter D [mm] bend loss [/cm] Simulation results “Fundamental Whispering Gallery Modes” TE-pol Meep FDTD

18 CW Microdisk Laser integrated with SOI wire
7.5-mm devices exhibit continuous-wave lasing Threshold current Ith = 0.6mA, voltage Vth = V, up to 7mW CW, 100 mW pulsed (coupled into SOI wire) J. Van Campenhout et al (Ghent University-IMEC, INL, CEA-LETI), OFC 2007 and Optics Express, p  (2007)

19 Integrated Devices: laser diode
Integrated laser diodes Microlasers (7.5um devices) Threshold current Ith = 0.6mA, voltage Vth = V slope efficiency = 15mW/mA, up to 7mW (Pulsed regime: up to 100mW peak power) Thermal roll-over can be shifted to higher drive current levels through the incorporation of an integrated heat sink as for the Fabry-Perot laser diodes

20 On-Chip Optical Interconnect
“Adding a compact and efficient optical link to a silicon chip, by heterogeneous integration” SOI waveguide SOI Optical Interconnect layer Electrical Interconnect layer Silicon transistor layer microdetector microlaser III-V material → European research programme PICMOS (Photonic Interconnect Layer on CMOS by Waferscale Integration, FP IST )

21 Outline Introduction DVS-BCB die-to-wafer bonding for hetero-integration Heterogeneously integrated laser diodes Heterogeneously integrated photodetectors p-i-n MSM Conclusions and outlook

22 Integrated Devices: detectors
Integrated photodetectors Side-coupled p-i-n photodetector Identical structure as bonded Fabry-Perot laser diode Relatively good responsivity (0.23A/W) Large number of processing steps – compatible with laser

23 Integrated Devices: detectors
Integrated photodetectors Vertical incidence p-i-n photodetector Coupling using a diffraction grating Low experimental responsivity (0.02A/W) but due to design Smaller number of processing steps – more compact design DVS- BCB layer Oxide buffer layer

24 Integrated Devices: detectors
Integrated photodetectors Evanescently coupled MSM detector Small number of processing steps High experimental responsivity (1.0A/W) Compact devices Epitaxial layer structure not compatible with laser epitaxy

25 Integrated Devices: detectors
Integrated photodetectors Evanescently coupled MSM detector Directional coupling between detector waveguide and SOI waveguide (3μm) SOI waveguide contact window Ti/Au contact 40μm 2 coplanar Schottky contacts InAlGaAs Graded schottky contact layer InGaAs absorption layer

26 Integrated Devices: detectors
Integrated photodetectors Evanescently coupled MSM detector 25μm long detector Wide spectral range (limited by bandgap wavelength of 1.65μm) 25μm long detector R = 1A/W (1550nm), IQE = 80% (5V bias) Idark = 3nA (5V bias)

27 Outline Introduction DVS-BCB die-to-wafer bonding for hetero-integration Heterogeneously integrated laser diodes Heterogeneously integrated photodetectors Conclusions and outlook

28 Conclusions and outlook
Heterogeneous III-V/Silicon PICs hold the promise to combine best of both worlds, resulting in complex active/passive integrated optical circuits. Bonding technology is an enabling technology to achieve this. Adhesive die-to-wafer bonding is a robust technology compatible with modest surface quality of III-V surfaces Proof-of-principle components have been demonstrated, illustrating the benefits of this technology. The design and characterization of more complex integrated circuits is on the way.

29 Acknowledgements PICMOS consortium, in particular CEA-LETI, TRACIT and INL Lyon for co-developing the InP/Si microlaser IMEC CMOS pilot line for fabricating the SOI photonic circuits ePIXnet Silicon Photonics Platform (IMEC+LETI) for organizing MPW runs on a a cost-sharing basis (


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