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Dive into the research topics where Jaime Cardenas is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaime Cardenas.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2014

Silicon-Chip Mid-Infrared Frequency Comb Generation

Austin G. Griffith; Ryan K. W. Lau; Jaime Cardenas; Yoshitomo Okawachi; Aseema Mohanty; Romy Fain; Yoon Ho Daniel Lee; Mengjie Yu; Christopher T. Phare; Carl B. Poitras; Alexander L. Gaeta; Michal Lipson

We report the first on-chip integrated mid-infrared frequency comb using a silicon optical parametric oscillator ring resonator. We demonstrate a 750-nm-wide comb centered at 2.6 um.


Optics Express | 2010

Wide-bandwidth continuously tunable optical delay line using silicon microring resonators

Jaime Cardenas; Mark A. Foster; Nicolás Sherwood-Droz; Carl B. Poitras; Hugo L. R. Lira; Beibei Zhang; Alexander L. Gaeta; Jacob B. Khurgin; Paul A. Morton; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate a distortion free tunable optical delay as long as 135 ps with a 10 GHz bandwidth using thermally tuned silicon microring resonators in the novel balanced configuration. The device is simple, easy to control and compact measuring only 30 µm wide by 250 µm long.


Optics Express | 2013

Athermal silicon microring resonators with titanium oxide cladding

Biswajeet Guha; Jaime Cardenas; Michal Lipson

We describe a novel approach for CMOS-compatible passively temperature insensitive silicon based optical devices using titanium oxide cladding which has a negative thermo-optic (TO) effect. We engineer the mode confinement in Si and TiO2 such that positive TO of Si is exactly cancelled out by negative TO of TiO2. We demonstrate robust operation of the resulting device over 35 degrees.


Optics Letters | 2012

Chip-based frequency combs with sub-100 GHz repetition rates

Adrea R. Johnson; Yoshitomo Okawachi; Jacob S. Levy; Jaime Cardenas; Kasturi Saha; Michal Lipson; Alexander L. Gaeta

By fabricating high-Q silicon-nitride spiral resonators, we demonstrate frequency combs spanning over 200 nm with free spectral ranges (FSRs) of 80, 40, and 20 GHz using cascaded four-wave mixing. We characterize the RF beat note for the 20 GHz FSR comb, and the measured linewidth of 3.6 MHz is consistent with thermal fluctuations in the resonator due to amplitude noise of the pump source. These combs represent an important advance towards developing a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-based system capable of linking the optical and electronic regimes.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2014

High Coupling Efficiency Etched Facet Tapers in Silicon Waveguides

Jaime Cardenas; Carl B. Poitras; Kevin Luke; Lian-Wee Luo; Paul A. Morton; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate a platform based on etched facet silicon inverse tapers for waveguide-lensed fiber coupling with a loss as low as 0.7 dB/facet. This platform can be fabricated on a wafer scale enabling mass-production of silicon photonic devices with broadband, high-efficiency couplers.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2012

Fast Thermal Switching of Wideband Optical Delay Line With No Long-Term Transient

Paul A. Morton; Jaime Cardenas; Jacob B. Khurgin; Michal Lipson

We present results for a broad bandwidth continuously tunable optical delay line based on the balanced side-coupled integrated space sequence of resonators scheme. A tunable delay of up to 345 ps is obtained without distortion of the optical signal. Fast thermal switching speed under 10 μs is achieved without any measurable long-term transient by utilizing a novel balanced thermal tuning scheme.


Optics Express | 2008

In-plane photonic transduction of silicon-on-insulator microcantilevers.

Jong Wook Noh; Ryan R. Anderson; Seunghyun Kim; Jaime Cardenas; Gregory P. Nordin

We demonstrate an in-plane photonic transduction method for microcantilevers, which have been widely investigated for sensor applications. In our approach the microcantilever is etched to form a single mode rib waveguide. Light propagates down the microcantilever and crosses a small gap at the free end of the microcantilever, some of which is captured by an asymmetrical multimode waveguide that terminates in a Y-branch. The Y-branch outputs are used to form a differential signal that is monotonically dependent on microcantilever deflection. The measured differential signal matches simulation when microcantilever rotation is properly accounted for. The measured differential signal sensitivity is 1.4 x 10(-4) nm(-1) and the minimum detectable deflection is 0.35 nm.


photonics global conference | 2010

High quality factor etchless silicon photonic ring resonators

Lian-Wee Luo; S. Wiederhecker Gustavo; Jaime Cardenas; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate high-Q silicon ring resonators fabricated by selective oxidation without any silicon etching. We achieve an intrinsic quality factor of 510,000 in 50 μm-radius ring resonators with ring losses of 0.8 dB/cm.


Optics Express | 2014

On-chip frequency comb generation at visible wavelengths via simultaneous second- and third-order optical nonlinearities.

Steven A. Miller; Kevin Luke; Yoshitomo Okawachi; Jaime Cardenas; Alexander L. Gaeta; Michal Lipson

Microresonator-based frequency comb generation at or near visible wavelengths would enable applications in precise optical clocks, frequency metrology, and biomedical imaging. Comb generation in the visible has been limited by strong material dispersion and loss at short wavelengths, and only very narrowband comb generation has reached below 800 nm. We use the second-order optical nonlinearity in an integrated high-Q silicon nitride ring resonator cavity to convert a near-infrared frequency comb into the visible range. We simultaneously demonstrate parametric frequency comb generation in the near-infrared, second-harmonic generation, and sum-frequency generation. We measure 17 comb lines converted to visible wavelengths extending to 765 nm.


Optics Express | 2013

High Q SiC microresonators

Jaime Cardenas; Mian Zhang; Christopher T. Phare; Shreyas Y. Shah; Carl B. Poitras; Biswajeet Guha; Michal Lipson

We demonstrate photonic devices based on standard 3C SiC epitaxially grown on silicon. We achieve high optical confinement by taking advantage of the high stiffness of SiC and undercutting the underlying silicon substrate. We demonstrate a 20 μm radius suspended microring resonator with Q=14,100 fabricated on commercially available SiC-on-silicon substrates.

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Paul A. Morton

University of California

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