Mark Pelusi
Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark Pelusi.
Optics Express | 2007
Steve Madden; Duk-Yong Choi; Douglas Bulla; Andrei Rode; Barry Luther-Davies; Vahid G. Ta'eed; Mark Pelusi; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We report on the fabrication and optical properties of etched highly nonlinear As(2)S(3) chalcogenide planar rib waveguides with lengths up to 22.5 cm and optical losses as low as 0.05 dB/cm at 1550 nm - the lowest ever reported. We demonstrate strong spectral broadening of 1.2 ps pulses, in good agreement with simulations, and find that the ratio of nonlinearity and dispersion linearizes the pulse chirp, reducing the spectral oscillations caused by self-phase modulation alone. When combined with a spectrally offset band-pass filter, this gives rise to a nonlinear transfer function suitable for all-optical regeneration of high data rate signals.
Optics Express | 2009
Michael Galili; Jing Xu; Hans Christian Hansen Mulvad; Leif Katsuo Oxenløwe; Anders Clausen; Palle Jeppesen; Barry Luther-Davies; Steve Madden; Andrei Rode; Duk-Yong Choi; Mark Pelusi; Feng Luan; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We report the first demonstration of error-free 640 Gbit/s demultiplexing using the Kerr non-linearity of an only 5 cm long chalcogenide glass waveguide chip. Our approach exploits four-wave mixing by the instantaneous nonlinear response of chalcogenide. Excellent performance is achieved with only 2 dB average power penalty and no indication of error-floor. Characterisation of the FWM efficiency for the chalcogenide waveguide is given and confirms the good performance of the device.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2010
Christelle Monat; Bill Corcoran; Dominik Pudo; Majid Ebnali-Heidari; Christian Grillet; Mark Pelusi; David J. Moss; Benjamin J. Eggleton; Thomas P. White; Liam O'Faolain; Thomas F. Krauss
We present a summary of our recent experiments showing how various nonlinear phenomena are enhanced due to slow light in silicon photonic crystal waveguides. These nonlinear processes include self-phase modulation (SPM), two-photon absorption (TPA), free-carrier related effects, and third-harmonic generation, the last effect being associated with the emission of green visible light, an unexpected phenomenon in silicon. These demonstrations exploit photonic crystal waveguides engineered to support slow modes with a range of group velocities as low as c/50 and, more crucially, with significantly reduced dispersion. We discuss the potential of slow light in photonic crystals for realizing compact nonlinear devices operating at low powers. In particular, we consider the application of SPM to all-optical regeneration, and experimentally investigate an original approach, where enhanced TPA and free-carrier absorption are used for partial regeneration of a high-bit rate data stream (10 Gb/s).
Optics Express | 2010
Bill Corcoran; Christelle Monat; Mark Pelusi; Christian Grillet; Thomas P. White; Liam O'Faolain; Thomas F. Krauss; Benjamin J. Eggleton; David J. Moss
We demonstrate optical performance monitoring of in-band optical signal to noise ratio (OSNR) and residual dispersion, at bit rates of 40Gb/s, 160Gb/s and 640Gb/s, using slow-light enhanced optical third harmonic generation (THG) in a compact (80 micron) dispersion engineered 2D silicon photonic crystal waveguide. We show that there is no intrinsic degradation in the enhancement of the signal processing at 640 Gb/s relative to that at 40Gb/s, and that this device should operate well above 1Tb/s. This work represents a record 16-fold increase in processing speed for a silicon device, and opens the door for slow light to play a key role in ultra-high bandwidth telecommunications systems.We demonstrate optical performance monitoring of in-band optical signal to noise ratio (OSNR) and residual dispersion, at bit rates of 40Gb/s, 160Gb/s and 640Gb/s, using slow-light enhanced optical third harmonic generation (THG) in a compact (80microm) dispersion engineered 2D silicon photonic crystal waveguide. We show that there is no intrinsic degradation in the enhancement of the signal processing at 640Gb/s relative to that at 40Gb/s, and that this device should operate well above 1Tb/s. This work represents a record 16-fold increase in processing speed for a silicon device, and opens the door for slow light to play a key role in ultra-high bandwidth telecommunications systems.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2008
Mark Pelusi; Vahid G. Ta'eed; Libin Fu; Eric Magi; Michael R. E. Lamont; Steve Madden; Duk-Yong Choi; Douglas Bulla; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton
Ultrahigh nonlinear tapered fiber and planar rib Chalcogenide waveguides have been developed to enable highspeed all-optical signal processing in compact, low-loss optical devices through the use of four-wave mixing (FWM) and cross-phase modulation (XPM) via the ultra fast Kerr effect. Tapering a commercial As2Se3 fiber is shown to reduce its effective core area and enhance the Kerr nonlinearity thereby enabling XPM wavelength conversion of a 40 Gb/s signal in a shorter 16-cm length device that allows a broader wavelength tuning range due to its smaller net chromatic dispersion. Progress toward photonic chip-scale devices is shown by fabricating As2S3 planar rib waveguides exhibiting nonlinearity up to 2080 W-1ldr km-1 and losses as low as 0.05 dB/cm. The materials high refractive index, ensuring more robust confinement of the optical mode, permits a more compact serpentine-shaped rib waveguide of 22.5 cm length on a 7-cm- size chip, which is successfully applied to broadband wavelength conversion of 40-80 Gb/s signals by XPM. A shorter 5-cm length planar waveguide proves most effective for all-optical time-division demultiplexing of a 160 Gb/s signal by FWM and analysis shows its length is near optimum for maximizing FWM in consideration of its dispersion and loss.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2007
Mark Pelusi; Vahid G. Ta'eed; Michael R. E. Lamont; Steve Madden; Duk-Yong Choi; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton
A low loss As2S3 planar waveguide with ultra-high optical Kerr nonlinearity ~2000 W-1 ldr km-1 and only 50-mm length demonstrates high-performance time-division demultiplexing of a 160-Gb/s signal into its tributary 10-Gb/s channels via four-wave mixing (FWM) with copropagating pump pulses. Although the waveguide has a high normal dispersion parameter, its combined high nonlinearity in such short length is shown to enable efficient FWM of high-speed optical signals for all-optical demultiplexing.
Optics Express | 2010
F. Li; Mark Pelusi; D.-X. Xu; A. Densmore; R. Ma; Siegfried Janz; D. J. Moss
We demonstrate all-optical demultiplexing at 160Gb/s in the C-band, based on four-wave mixing (FWM) in a silicon nanowire. We achieve errorfree operation with a penalty of ~ 3.9dB at 10 bit error rate.We demonstrate all-optical time division demultiplexing from 160Gb/s to 10Gb/s in the C-band, based on four-wave mixing (FWM) in a silicon nanowire. We achieve error-free operation with a system penalty of ∼ 3.9dB at 10–9 BER.
Optics Express | 2009
Feng Luan; Mark Pelusi; Michael R. E. Lamont; Duk-Yong Choi; Steve Madden; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We demonstrate broadband wavelength conversion of a 40 Gb/s return-to-zero signal using four-wave-mixing (FWM) in a dispersion engineered chalcogenide glass waveguide. The 6 cm long planar rib waveguide 2 mum wide was fabricated in a 0.87 mum thick film etched 350nm deep to correspond to a design where waveguide dispersion offsets the material leading to near-zero dispersion in the C-band and broadband phase matched FWM. The reduced dimensions also enhance the nonlinear coefficient to 9800 W(-1)km(-1) at 1550 nm enabling broadband conversion in a shorter device. In this work, we demonstrate 80 nm wavelength conversions with 1.65 dB of power penalty at a bit-error rate of 10(-9). Spectral measurements and simulations indicate extended broadband operation is possible.
Optics Express | 2009
Lam Anh Bui; Mark Pelusi; Trung D. Vo; Niusha Sarkhosh; Hossein Emami; Benjamin J. Eggleton; Arnan Mitchell
A broadband photonic instantaneous frequency measurement system utilizing four-wave mixing in highly nonlinear fiber is demonstrated. This new approach is highly stable and does not require any high-speed electronics or photodetectors. A first principles model accurately predicts the system response. Frequency measurement responses from 1 to 40 GHz are demonstrated and simple reconfiguration allows the system to operate over multiple bands.
Optics Express | 2010
Trung D. Vo; Hao Hu; Michael Galili; Evarist Palushani; Jing Xu; Leif Katsuo Oxenløwe; Steve Madden; D.-Y. Choi; Douglas Bulla; Mark Pelusi; Jochen Schröder; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We demonstrate chip-based Tbaud optical signal processing for all-optical performance monitoring, switching and demultiplexing based on the instantaneous Kerr nonlinearity in a dispersion-engineered As(2)S(3) planar waveguide. At the Tbaud transmitter, we use a THz bandwidth radio-frequency spectrum analyzer to perform all-optical performance monitoring and to optimize the optical time division multiplexing stages as well as mitigate impairments, for example, dispersion. At the Tbaud receiver, we demonstrate error-free demultiplexing of a 1.28 Tbit/s single wavelength, return-to-zero signal to 10 Gbit/s via four-wave mixing with negligible system penalty (< 0.5 dB). Excellent performance, including high four-wave mixing conversion efficiency and no indication of an error-floor, was achieved. Our results establish the feasibility of Tbaud signal processing using compact nonlinear planar waveguides for Tbit/s Ethernet applications.
Collaboration
Dive into the Mark Pelusi's collaboration.
Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputs