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Dive into the research topics where Diedrik Vermeulen is active.

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Featured researches published by Diedrik Vermeulen.


Optics Express | 2014

Silicon photonics broadband modulation-based isolator

C.R. Doerr; Long Chen; Diedrik Vermeulen

We discuss an optical isolator design based on tandem phase modulators in a long interferometer. It provides low-loss, broadband isolation in a photonic integrated circuit without requiring special materials or fabrication steps. It was demonstrated in silicon photonics.


Optics Letters | 2017

Large-scale silicon nitride nanophotonic phased arrays at infrared and visible wavelengths

Christopher V. Poulton; Matthew J. Byrd; Manan Raval; Zhan Su; Nanxi Li; Erman Timurdogan; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Diedrik Vermeulen; Michael R. Watts

We demonstrate passive large-scale nanophotonic phased arrays in a CMOS-compatible silicon photonic platform. Silicon nitride waveguides are used to allow for higher input power and lower phase variation compared to a silicon-based distribution network. A phased array at an infrared wavelength of 1550 nm is demonstrated with an ultra-large aperture size of 4  mm×4  mm, achieving a record small and near diffraction-limited spot size of 0.021°×0.021° with a side lobe suppression of 10 dB. A main beam power of 400 mW is observed. Using the same silicon nitride platform and phased array architecture, we also demonstrate, to the best of our knowledge, the first large-aperture visible nanophotonic phased array at 635 nm with an aperture size of 0.5  mm×0.5  mm and a spot size of 0.064°×0.074°.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2015

Silicon photonic integrated circuit swept-source optical coherence tomography receiver with dual polarization, dual balanced, in-phase and quadrature detection

Zhao Wang; Hsiang-Chieh Lee; Diedrik Vermeulen; Long Chen; Torben Nielsen; Seo Yeon Park; Allan Ghaemi; Eric S. Swanson; Chris Doerr; James G. Fujimoto

Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a widely used three-dimensional (3D) optical imaging method with many biomedical and non-medical applications. Miniaturization, cost reduction, and increased functionality of OCT systems will be critical for future emerging clinical applications. We present a silicon photonic integrated circuit swept-source OCT (SS-OCT) coherent receiver with dual polarization, dual balanced, in-phase and quadrature (IQ) detection. We demonstrate multiple functional capabilities of IQ polarization resolved detection including: complex-conjugate suppressed full-range OCT, polarization diversity detection, and polarization-sensitive OCT. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a silicon photonic integrated receiver for OCT. The integrated coherent receiver provides a miniaturized, low-cost solution for SS-OCT, and is also a key step towards a fully integrated high speed SS-OCT system with good performance and multi-functional capabilities. With further performance improvement and cost reduction, photonic integrated technology promises to greatly increase penetration of OCT systems in existing applications and enable new applications.


Optics Letters | 2017

High-power thulium lasers on a silicon photonics platform

Nanxi Li; Purnawirman; Zhan Su; E. Salih Magden; Patrick T. Callahan; Katia Shtyrkova; Ming Xin; Alfonso Ruocco; Christopher Baiocco; Erich P. Ippen; Franz X. Kärtner; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Diedrik Vermeulen; Michael R. Watts

Mid-infrared laser sources are of great interest for various applications, including light detection and ranging, spectroscopy, communication, trace-gas detection, and medical sensing. Silicon photonics is a promising platform that enables these applications to be integrated on a single chip with low cost and compact size. Silicon-based high-power lasers have been demonstrated at 1.55 μm wavelength, while in the 2 μm region, to the best of our knowledge, high-power, high-efficiency, and monolithic light sources have been minimally investigated. In this Letter, we report on high-power CMOS-compatible thulium-doped distributed feedback and distributed Bragg reflector lasers with single-mode output powers up to 267 and 387 mW, and slope efficiencies of 14% and 23%, respectively. More than 70 dB side-mode suppression ratio is achieved for both lasers. This work extends the applicability of silicon photonic microsystems in the 2 μm region.


Optics Express | 2016

C-band swept wavelength erbium-doped fiber laser with a high-Q tunable interior-ridge silicon microring cavity

Nanxi Li; Erman Timurdogan; Christopher V. Poulton; Matthew J. Byrd; Emir Salih Magden; Zhan Su; Purnawirman; Gerald Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Diedrik Vermeulen; Michael R. Watts

We demonstrate an erbium-doped fiber laser with a tunable silicon microring cavity. We measured a narrow laser linewidth (16 kHz) and single-mode continuous-wave emission over the C-band (1530nm-to-1560nm) at a swept-wavelength rate of 22,600nm/s or 3106THz/s.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2016

Demonstration of Silicon Photonics Push–Pull Modulators Designed for Manufacturability

Diedrik Vermeulen; Ricardo Aroca; Long Chen; Larry Pellach; Greg McBrien; Chris Doerr

We demonstrate a single-drive push-pull silicon photonics modulator copackaged with a linear driver upon ON-OFF keying and binary phase-shift keying modulation formats at a speed of 28 Gb/s. The modulator was designed for manufacturability by crossing the signal radio frequency lines and the optical waveguides in the middle of the device, thereby obtaining a dc extinction ratio of up to 40 dB and a dynamic extinction ratio of 12 dB over the whole C-band.


Light-Science & Applications | 2018

Octave-spanning coherent supercontinuum generation in silicon on insulator from 1.06 μm to beyond 2.4 μm

Neetesh Singh; Ming Xin; Diedrik Vermeulen; Katia Shtyrkova; Nanxi Li; Patrick T. Callahan; Emir Salih Magden; Alfonso Ruocco; Nicholas M. Fahrenkopf; Christopher Baiocco; B. P.-P. Kuo; Stojan Radic; Erich P. Ippen; Franz X. Kärtner; Michael R. Watts

Efficient complementary metal-oxide semiconductor-based nonlinear optical devices in the near-infrared are in strong demand. Due to two-photon absorption in silicon, however, much nonlinear research is shifting towards unconventional photonics platforms. In this work, we demonstrate the generation of an octave-spanning coherent supercontinuum in a silicon waveguide covering the spectral region from the near- to shortwave-infrared. With input pulses of 18 pJ in energy, the generated signal spans the wavelength range from the edge of the silicon transmission window, approximately 1.06 to beyond 2.4 μm, with a −20 dB bandwidth covering 1.124–2.4 μm. An octave-spanning supercontinuum was also observed at the energy levels as low as 4 pJ (−35 dB bandwidth). We also measured the coherence over an octave, obtaining , in good agreement with the simulations. In addition, we demonstrate optimization of the third-order dispersion of the waveguide to strengthen the dispersive wave and discuss the advantage of having a soliton at the long wavelength edge of an octave-spanning signal for nonlinear applications. This research paves the way for applications, such as chip-scale precision spectroscopy, optical coherence tomography, optical frequency metrology, frequency synthesis and wide-band wavelength division multiplexing in the telecom window.


Advanced Photonics 2016 (IPR, NOMA, Sensors, Networks, SPPCom, SOF) (2016), paper IW1A.3 | 2016

Ultra-Compact CMOS-Compatible Ytterbium Microlaser

Zhan Su; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Nanxi Li; Emir Salih Magden; Purnawirman Purnawirman; Daniel Coleman; Nicholas M. Fahrenkopf; Christopher Baiocco; Thomas N. Adam; Gerald Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Diedrik Vermeulen; Michael R. Watts

We demonstrate a waveguide-coupled trench-based ytterbium microlaser, achieving a sub-milliwatt lasing threshold and a 1.9% slope efficiency within an ultra-compact 40-µm-radius cavity while maintaining full compatibility with a CMOS foundry process.


Optics Express | 2018

Monolithically integrated erbium-doped tunable laser on a CMOS-compatible silicon photonics platform

Nanxi Li; Diedrik Vermeulen; Zhan Su; Emir Salih Magden; Ming Xin; Neetesh Singh; Alfonso Ruocco; Jelena Notaros; Christopher V. Poulton; Erman Timurdogan; Christopher Baiocco; Michael R. Watts

A tunable laser source is a crucial photonic component for many applications, such as spectroscopic measurements, wavelength division multiplexing (WDM), frequency-modulated light detection and ranging (LIDAR), and optical coherence tomography (OCT). In this article, we demonstrate the first monolithically integrated erbium-doped tunable laser on a complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible silicon photonics platform. Erbium-doped Al2O3 sputtered on top is used as a gain medium to achieve lasing. The laser achieves a tunability from 1527 nm to 1573 nm, with a >40 dB side mode suppression ratio (SMSR). The wide tuning range (46 nm) is realized with a Vernier cavity, formed by two Si3N4 microring resonators. With 107 mW on-chip 980 nm pump power, up to 1.6 mW output lasing power is obtained with a 2.2% slope efficiency. The maximum output power is limited by pump power. Fine tuning of the laser wavelength is demonstrated by using the gain cavity phase shifter. Signal response times are measured to be around 200 μs and 35 µs for the heaters used to tune the Vernier rings and gain cavity longitudinal mode, respectively. The linewidth of the laser is 340 kHz, measured via a self-delay heterodyne detection method. Furthermore, the laser signal is stabilized by continuous locking to a mode-locked laser (MLL) over 4900 seconds with a measured peak-to-peak frequency deviation below 10 Hz.


Nature Communications | 2018

Transmissive silicon photonic dichroic filters with spectrally selective waveguides

Emir Salih Magden; Nanxi Li; Manan Raval; Christopher V. Poulton; Alfonso Ruocco; Neetesh Singh; Diedrik Vermeulen; Erich P. Ippen; Leslie A. Kolodziejski; Michael R. Watts

Many optical systems require broadband filters with sharp roll-offs for efficiently splitting or combining light across wide spectra. While free space dichroic filters can provide broadband selectivity, on-chip integration of these high-performance filters is crucial for the scalability of photonic applications in multi-octave interferometry, spectroscopy, and wideband wavelength-division multiplexing. Here we present the theory, design, and experimental characterization of integrated, transmissive, 1 × 2 port dichroic filters using spectrally selective waveguides. Mode evolution through adiabatic transitions in the demonstrated filters allows for single cutoff and flat-top responses with low insertion losses and octave-wide simulated bandwidths. Filters with cutoffs around 1550 and 2100 nm are fabricated on a silicon-on-insulator platform with standard complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor processes. A filter roll-off of 2.82 dB nm−1 is achieved while maintaining ultra-broadband operation. This new class of nanophotonic dichroic filters can lead to new paradigms in on-chip communications, sensing, imaging, optical synthesis, and display applications.Optical filters are an integral part of many optical devices and circuits. Here, Magden et al. use a design based on mode evolution to demonstrate CMOS-compatible dichroic filters with more than an octave bandwidth, sharp roll-off and transmissive short- and long-wavelength outputs

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Michael R. Watts

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Nanxi Li

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alfonso Ruocco

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Emir Salih Magden

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Zhan Su

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Christopher V. Poulton

University of Colorado Boulder

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Ming Xin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Neetesh Singh

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Christopher Baiocco

State University of New York System

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Patrick T. Callahan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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