Mark T. Wade
University of Colorado Boulder
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark T. Wade.
Nature | 2015
Chen Sun; Mark T. Wade; Yunsup Lee; Jason S. Orcutt; Luca Alloatti; Michael Georgas; Andrew Waterman; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Rimas Avizienis; Sen Lin; Benjamin R. Moss; Rajesh Kumar; Fabio Pavanello; Amir H. Atabaki; Henry Cook; Albert J. Ou; Jonathan Leu; Yu-Hsin Chen; Krste Asanovic; Rajeev J. Ram; Miloš A. Popović; Vladimir Stojanovic
Data transport across short electrical wires is limited by both bandwidth and power density, which creates a performance bottleneck for semiconductor microchips in modern computer systems—from mobile phones to large-scale data centres. These limitations can be overcome by using optical communications based on chip-scale electronic–photonic systems enabled by silicon-based nanophotonic devices8. However, combining electronics and photonics on the same chip has proved challenging, owing to microchip manufacturing conflicts between electronics and photonics. Consequently, current electronic–photonic chips are limited to niche manufacturing processes and include only a few optical devices alongside simple circuits. Here we report an electronic–photonic system on a single chip integrating over 70 million transistors and 850 photonic components that work together to provide logic, memory, and interconnect functions. This system is a realization of a microprocessor that uses on-chip photonic devices to directly communicate with other chips using light. To integrate electronics and photonics at the scale of a microprocessor chip, we adopt a ‘zero-change’ approach to the integration of photonics. Instead of developing a custom process to enable the fabrication of photonics, which would complicate or eliminate the possibility of integration with state-of-the-art transistors at large scale and at high yield, we design optical devices using a standard microelectronics foundry process that is used for modern microprocessors. This demonstration could represent the beginning of an era of chip-scale electronic–photonic systems with the potential to transform computing system architectures, enabling more powerful computers, from network infrastructure to data centres and supercomputers.
IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2015
Chen Sun; Michael Georgas; Jason S. Orcutt; Benjamin Moss; Yu-Hsin Chen; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Mark T. Wade; Karan K. Mehta; Kareem Nammari; Erman Timurdogan; Daniel L. Miller; Ofer Tehar-Zahav; Zvi Sternberg; Jonathan Leu; Johanna Chong; Reha Bafrali; Gurtej S. Sandhu; Michael R. Watts; Roy Meade; Miloš A. Popović; Rajeev J. Ram; Vladimir Stojanovic
Silicon-photonics is an emerging technology that can overcome the tradeoffs faced by traditional electrical I/O. Due to ballooning development costs for advanced CMOS nodes, however, widespread adoption necessitates seamless photonics integration into mainstream processes, with as few process changes as possible. In this work, we demonstrate a silicon-photonic link with optical devices and electronics integrated on the same chip in a 0.18 µm bulk CMOS memory periphery process. To enable waveguides and optics in process-native polysilicon, we introduce deep-trench isolation, placed underneath to prevent optical mode leakage into the bulk silicon substrate, and implant-amorphization to reduce polysilicon loss. A resonant defect-trap photodetector using polysilicon eliminates need for germanium integration and completes the fully polysilicon-based photonics platform. Transceiver circuits take advantage of photonic device integration, achieving 350 fJ/b transmit and 71 µA pp BER = 10 -12 receiver sensitivity at 5 Gb/s. We show high fabrication uniformity and high-Q resonators, enabling dense wavelength-division multiplexing with 9-wavelength 45 Gb/s transmit/receive data-rates per waveguide/fiber. To combat perturbations to variation- and thermally-sensitive resonant devices, we demonstrate an on-chip thermal tuning feedback loop that locks the resonance to the laser wavelength. A 5 m optical chip-to-chip link achieves 5 Gb/s while consuming 3 pJ/b and 12 pJ/bit of circuit and optical energy, respectively.
Optics Letters | 2013
Jeffrey M. Shainline; Jason S. Orcutt; Mark T. Wade; Kareem Nammari; Benjamin Moss; Michael Georgas; Chen Sun; Rajeev J. Ram; Vladimir Stojanovic; Miloš A. Popović
We demonstrate the first (to the best of our knowledge) depletion-mode carrier-plasma optical modulator fabricated in a standard advanced complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) logic process (45 nm node SOI CMOS) with no process modifications. The zero-change CMOS photonics approach enables this device to be monolithically integrated into state-of-the-art microprocessors and advanced electronics. Because these processes support lateral p-n junctions but not efficient ridge waveguides, we accommodate these constraints with a new type of resonant modulator. It is based on a hybrid microring/disk cavity formed entirely in the sub-90 nm thick monocrystalline silicon transistor body layer. Electrical contact of both polarities is made along the inner radius of the multimode ring cavity via an array of silicon spokes. The spokes connect to p and n regions formed using transistor well implants, which form radially extending lateral junctions that provide index modulation. We show 5 Gbps data modulation at 1265 nm wavelength with 5.2 dB extinction ratio and an estimated 40 fJ/bit energy consumption. Broad thermal tuning is demonstrated across 3.2 THz (18 nm) with an efficiency of 291 GHz/mW. A single postprocessing step to remove the silicon handle wafer was necessary to support low-loss optical confinement in the device layer. This modulator is an important step toward monolithically integrated CMOS photonic interconnects.
IEEE Journal of Solid-state Circuits | 2016
Chen Sun; Mark T. Wade; Michael Georgas; Sen Lin; Luca Alloatti; Benjamin Moss; Rajesh Kumar; Amir H. Atabaki; Fabio Pavanello; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Jason S. Orcutt; Rajeev J. Ram; Miloš A. Popović; Vladimir Stojanovic
The microring resonator is critical for dense wavelength division multiplexed (DWDM) chip-to-chip optical I/O, enabling modulation and channel selection at the μm-scale suitable for a VLSI chip. Microring-based links, however, require active tuning to counteract process and thermo-optic variations. Here, we present a bit-statistical tuner that decouples tracking of optical one and zero-levels to realize non-dc-balanced data transmission, an “eye-max”-locking controller, and self-heating cancellation without need for a high-speed sensing frontend. We implement the tuner on a 45 nm CMOS-SOI process with monolithically integrated photonic devices and circuits. The tuner consumes 0.74 mW in the logic while achieving a record 524 GHz (> 50 K temperature) tuning range at 3.8 μW/GHz heater efficiency. To our knowledge, this is the highest range and heater efficiency reported by an on-chip closed-loop thermal tuner to date. The tuner integrates with a 5 Gb/s 30 fJ/bit monolithic microring transmitter, achieving wavelength-lock and immunity to both tracking failures and self-heating events caused by arbitrary, nondc-balanced bitstreams. In addition, the tuner provides critical functionality for an 11-λ DWDM transmitter macro capable of 11 × 8 Gb/s bandwidth on a fiber. Together with the transmitter, a 10 Gb/s on-chip monolithic optical receiver with 10-12 BER sensitivity of 9 μA at 10 Gb/s enables a sub-pJ/bit 5 Gb/s optical chip-to-chip link, with the bit-statistical tuner providing thermally robust microring operation.
arXiv: Optics | 2015
Cale M. Gentry; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Mark T. Wade; Martin J. Stevens; Shellee D. Dyer; Xiaoge Zeng; Fabio Pavanello; Thomas Gerrits; Sae Woo Nam; Richard P. Mirin; Miloš A. Popović
Correlated photon pairs are a fundamental building block of quantum photonic systems. While pair sources have previously been integrated on silicon chips built using customized photonics manufacturing processes, these often take advantage of only a small fraction of the established techniques for microelectronics fabrication and have yet to be integrated in a process which also supports electronics. Here we report the first demonstration of quantum-correlated photon pair generation in a device fabricated in an unmodified advanced (sub-100nm) complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process, alongside millions of working transistors. The microring resonator photon pair source is formed in the transistor layer structure, with the resonator core formed by the silicon layer typically used for the transistor body. With ultra-low continuous-wave on-chip pump powers ranging from 5
symposium on vlsi circuits | 2014
Michael Georgas; Benjamin Moss; Chen Sun; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Jason S. Orcutt; Mark T. Wade; Yu-Hsin Chen; Kareem Nammari; Jonathan Leu; Aravind Srinivasan; Rajeev J. Ram; Miloš A. Popović; Vladimir Stojanovic
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international solid-state circuits conference | 2013
Benjamin Moss; Chen Sun; Michael Georgas; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Jason S. Orcutt; Jonathan Leu; Mark T. Wade; Yu-Hsin Chen; Kareem Nammari; Xiaoxi Wang; Hanqing Li; Rajeev J. Ram; Miloš A. Popović; Vladimir Stojanovic
W to 400
optical fiber communication conference | 2016
Jelena Notaros; Fabio Pavanello; Mark T. Wade; Cale M. Gentry; Amir H. Atabaki; Luca Alloatti; Rajeev J. Ram; Miloš A. Popović
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Optics Letters | 2013
Jeffrey M. Shainline; Jason S. Orcutt; Mark T. Wade; Kareem Nammari; Ofer Tehar-Zahav; Zvi Sternberg; Roy Meade; Rajeev J. Ram; Vladimir Stojanovic; Miloš A. Popović
W, we demonstrate pair generation rates between 165 Hz and 332 kHz using >80% efficient WSi superconducting nanowire single photon detectors. Coincidences-to-accidentals ratios consistently exceeding 40 were measured with a maximum of 55. In the process of characterizing this source we also accurately predict pair generation rates from the results of classical four-wave mixing measurements. This proof-of-principle device demonstrates the potential of commercial CMOS microelectronics as an advanced quantum photonics platform with capability of large volume, pristine process control, and where state-of-the-art high-speed digital circuits could interact with quantum photonic circuits.
symposium on vlsi technology | 2014
Roy Meade; Jason S. Orcutt; Karan K. Mehta; Ofer Tehar-Zahav; Daniel L. Miller; Michael Georgas; Ben Moss; Chen Sun; Yu-Hsin Chen; Jeffrey M. Shainline; Mark T. Wade; Reha Bafrali; Zvi Sternberg; Galina Machavariani; Gurtej S. Sandhu; Miloš A. Popović; Rajeev J. Ram; Vladimir Stojanovic
An optical transmitter and receiver with monolithically-integrated photonic devices and circuits are demonstrated together for the first time in a commercial 45nm SOI process, without any process changes. The transmitter features an interleaved-junction carrier-depletion ring modulator and operates at 3.5Gb/s with an 8dB extinction ratio and combined circuit and device energy cost of 70fJ/bit. The optical receiver connects to an integrated SiGe detector designed for 1180nm wavelength and performs at 2.5Gb/s with 15μA sensitivity and energy cost of 220fJ/bit.