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Dive into the research topics where Marcel Hoekman is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcel Hoekman.


Optics Express | 2011

On-chip CMOS compatible reconfigurable optical delay line with seperate carrier tuning for microwave photonic signal processing.

Maurizio Burla; David Marpaung; Leimeng Zhuang; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Muhannad Rezaul H. Khan; Arne Leinse; Marcel Hoekman; Rene Heideman

We report, for the first time, an integrated photonic signal processor consisting of a reconfigurable optical delay line (ODL) with a separate carrier tuning (SCT) unit and an optical sideband filter on a single CMOS compatible photonic chip. The processing functionalities are carried out with optical ring resonators as building blocks. We show that the integrated approach together with the use of SCT technique allows the implementation of a wideband, fully-tunable ODL with reduced complexity. To highlight the functionalities of the processor, we demonstrate a reconfigurable microwave photonic filter where the ODL has been configured in a bandwidth over 1 GHz.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2010

Novel Ring Resonator-Based Integrated Photonic Beamformer for Broadband Phased Array Receive Antennas—Part II: Experimental Prototype

Leimeng Zhuang; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Arjan Meijerink; Maurizio Burla; David Marpaung; Arne Leinse; Marcel Hoekman; Rene Heideman; van Wim Etten

An experimental prototype is presented that illustrates the implementation aspects and feasibility of the novel ring resonator-based optical beamformer concept that has been developed and analyzed in Part I of this paper . This concept can be used for seamless control of the reception angle in broadband wireless receivers employing a large phased array antenna (PAA). The design, fabrication, and characterization of a dedicated chip are described, in which an 8 × 1 optical beamforming network, an optical sideband filter for single-sideband suppressed carrier modulation, and a carrier re-insertion coupler for balanced optical detection are integrated. The chip was designed for satellite television reception using a broadband PAA, and was realized in a low-loss, CMOS-compatible optical waveguide technology. Tuning is performed thermo-optically, with a switching time of 1 ms. Group delay response and power response measurements show the correct operation of the OBFN and OSBF, respectively. Measurements on a complete beamformer prototype (including the electro-optical and opto-electrical conversions) demonstrate an optical sideband suppression of 25 dB, RF-to-RF delay generation up to 0.63 ns with a phase accuracy better than ¿/10 radians, and coherent combining of four RF input signals, all in a frequency range of 1-2 GHz.


Optics Express | 2010

A photonic chip based frequency discriminator for a high performance microwave photonic link

David Marpaung; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Arne Leinse; Marcel Hoekman

We report a high performance phase modulation direct detection microwave photonic link employing a photonic chip as a frequency discriminator. The photonic chip consists of five optical ring resonators (ORRs) which are fully programmable using thermo-optical tuning. In this discriminator a drop-port response of an ORR is cascaded with a through response of another ORR to yield a linear phase modulation (PM) to intensity modulation (IM) conversion. The balanced photonic link employing the PM to IM conversion exhibits high second-order and third-order input intercept points of + 46 dBm and + 36 dBm, respectively, which are simultaneously achieved at one bias point.


arXiv: Optics | 2015

Programmable photonic signal processor chip for radiofrequency applications

Leimeng Zhuang; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Marcel Hoekman; Klaus J. Boller; Arthur J. Lowery

Integrated microwave photonics, an emerging technology combining radio frequency (RF) engineering and integrated photonics, has great potential to be adopted for wideband analog processing applications. However, it has been a challenge to provide photonic integrated circuits with equal levels of function flexibility as compared with their electronic counterparts. Here, we introduce a disruptive approach to tackle this need, which is analogous to an electronic field-programmable gate array. We use a grid of tunable Mach–Zehnder couplers interconnected in a two-dimensional mesh network, each working as a photonic processing unit. Such a device is able to be programmed into many different circuit topologies and thereby provide a diversity of functions. This paper provides, to the best of our knowledge, the first ever demonstration of this concept and shows that a programmable chip with a free spectral range of 14 GHz enables RF filters featuring continuous, over-two-octave frequency coverage, i.e., 1.6–6 GHz, and variable passband shaping ranging from a 55 dB extinction notch filter to a 1.6 GHz bandwidth flat-top filter.


Advanced Optical Technologies | 2015

TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform

Kerstin Worhoff; Rene Heideman; Arne Leinse; Marcel Hoekman

Abstract Photonic applications based on planar waveguide technology impose stringent requirements on properties such as optical propagation losses, light coupling to optical fibers, integration density, as well as on reliability and reproducibility. The latter is correlated to a high level of control of the refractive index and waveguide geometry. In this paper, we review a versatile dielectric waveguide platform, called TriPleX, which is based on alternating silicon nitride and silicon dioxide films. Fabrication with CMOS-compatible equipment based on low-pressure chemical vapor deposition enables the realization of stable material compositions being a prerequisite to the control of waveguide properties and modal shape. The transparency window of both materials allows for the realization of low-loss waveguides over a wide wavelength range (400 nm–2.35 μm). Propagation losses as low as 5×10-4 dB/cm are reported. Three basic geometries (box shell, double stripe, and filled box) can be distinguished. A specific tapering technology is developed for on-chip, low-loss (<0.1 dB) spotsize convertors, allowing for combining efficient fiber to chip coupling with high-contrast waveguides required for increased functional complexity as well as for hybrid integration with other photonic platforms such as InP and SOI. The functionality of the TriPleX platform is captured by verified basic building blocks. The corresponding library and associated design kit is available for multi-project wafer (MPW) runs. Several applications of this platform technology in communications, biomedicine, sensing, as well as a few special fields of photonics are treated in more detail.


Optics Express | 2013

Si3N4 ring resonator-based microwave photonic notch filter with an ultrahigh peak rejection

David Marpaung; Blair Morrison; Ravi Pant; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Arne Leinse; Marcel Hoekman; Rene Heideman; Benjamin J. Eggleton

We report a simple technique in microwave photonic (MWP) signal processing that allows the use of an optical filter with a shallow notch to exhibit a microwave notch filter with anomalously high rejection level. We implement this technique using a low-loss, tunable Si₃N₄ optical ring resonator as the optical filter, and achieved an MWP notch filter with an ultra-high peak rejection > 60 dB, a tunable high resolution bandwidth of 247-840 MHz, and notch frequency tuning of 2-8 GHz. To our knowledge, this is a record combined peak rejection and resolution for an integrated MWP filter.


Optics Express | 2007

Densely integrated microring resonator based photonic devices for use in access networks

E.J. Klein; P.J. Urban; G. Sengo; L.T.H. Hilderink; Marcel Hoekman; Rudy Jan Maria Pellens; Paul van Dijk; Alfred Driessen

Two reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexers, operating in the second or third telecom window, as well as a 1x4x4 reconfigurable lambda-router operating in the second telecom window, are demonstrated. The devices have a footprint less than 2 mm(2) and are based on thermally tunable vertically coupled microring resonators fabricated in Si(3)N(4)/SiO(2).


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2012

TriPleX-Based Integrated Optical Ring Resonators for Lab-on-a-Chip and Environmental Detection

Rene Heideman; Marcel Hoekman; Erik Schreuder

In this paper, we report experimental results of integrated optics ring resonators (RRs) based on TriPleX waveguide technology. The RRs operate in the near infrared enabling the use of very cost effective VCSELs as a light source. The experimentally obtained response of the ring resontors is in good agreement with theory, while the measured through and drop responses show very low on-chip losses. The chips show good coupling efficiencies to external fibers due to integrated spotsize convertors. The corresponding signal-to-noise ratio enables for measurements of changes in refractive index (RI) smaller than 1 × 10-6 RIU. The RRs are combined with an 850-nm vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) as a light source and prototype electronic equipment for signal processing. Several applications are described here, such as RI measurements in fluidic channels, label-free biochemical surface reactions, and gas detection in ambient atmosphere.


Optics Express | 2015

On-chip visible-to-infrared supercontinuum generation with more than 495 THz spectral bandwidth

Jörn P. Epping; Tim Hellwig; Marcel Hoekman; Richard Mateman; Arne Leinse; Rene Heideman; A. van Rees; P.J.M. van der Slot; Christopher James Lee; Carsten Fallnich; K-J. Boller

We report ultra-broadband supercontinuum generation in high-confinement Si3N4 integrated optical waveguides. The spectrum extends through the visible (from 470 nm) to the infrared spectral range (2130 nm) comprising a spectral bandwidth wider than 495 THz, which is the widest supercontinuum spectrum generated on a chip.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2015

Compact and reconfigurable silicon nitride time-bin entanglement circuit

Chunle Xiong; Xiang Zhang; A. Mahendra; Jiakun He; Duk-Yong Choi; Chang-Joon Chae; David Marpaung; Arne Leinse; Rene Heideman; Marcel Hoekman; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Ruud Oldenbeuving; P.W.L. van Dijk; Caterina Taddei; Philip Heng Wai Leong; Benjamin J. Eggleton

Photonic-chip-based time-bin entanglement has attracted significant attention because of its potential for quantum communication and computation. Useful time-bin entanglement systems must be able to generate, manipulate, and analyze entangled photons on a photonic chip for stable, scalable, and reconfigurable operation. Here we report the first time-bin entanglement photonic chip that integrates pump time-bin preparation, wavelength demultiplexing, and entanglement analysis. A two-photon interference fringe with 88.4% visibility is measured (without subtracting any noise), indicating the high performance of the chip. Our approach, based on a silicon nitride photonic circuit, which combines low loss and tight integration features, paves the way for scalable real-world quantum information processors.

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David Marpaung

Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems

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Petrus J.M. van der Slot

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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Jörn P. Epping

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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