Mattia Pagani
Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mattia Pagani.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2014
David Marpaung; Mattia Pagani; Blair Morrison; Benjamin J. Eggleton
Harnessing nonlinear optical effects in a photonic chip scale has been proven useful for a number of key applications in optical communications. Microwave photonics can also benefit from the adoption of such a technology, creating a new concept of nonlinear integrated microwave photonics. Here, we discuss the potential of on-chip nonlinear processing towards the creation of robust and multifunctional microwave photonic (MWP) processors. We also highlight key recent results in the field, including frequency agile MWP filters and ultrawideband signal generators.
Optics Express | 2014
Mattia Pagani; David Marpaung; Duk-Yong Choi; Steve Madden; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We present the first microwave photonic phase shifter using stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) on-chip. The unique ability of SBS to generate both narrowband gain and loss resonances allows us to achieve low ±1.5 dB amplitude fluctuations, which is a record for integrated devices, along with 240° continuously tunable phase shift. Contrary to previous SBS-based approaches, the phase shift tuning mechanism relies on tuning the power, not the frequency, of two SBS pumps, making it more suited to on-chip implementations. We finally demonstrate that SBS pump depletion leads to amplitude response fluctuations, as well as increasing the insertion loss of the phase shifter. Advantageously, shorter integrated platforms possess higher pump depletion thresholds compared to long fibers, thus offering greater potential for reducing the insertion loss.
Optics Letters | 2015
Alvaro Casas-Bedoya; Blair Morrison; Mattia Pagani; David Marpaung; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We demonstrate the first, to the best of our knowledge, functional signal processing device based on stimulated Brillouin scattering in a silicon nanowire. We use only 1 dB of on-chip stimulated Brillouin scattering gain to create an RF photonic notch filter with 48 dB of suppression, 98 MHz linewidth, and 6 GHz frequency tuning. This device has potential applications in on-chip microwave signal processing and establishes the foundation for the first CMOS-compatible high-performance RF photonic filter.
Optics Letters | 2014
Mattia Pagani; David Marpaung; Benjamin J. Eggleton
We introduce a new principle that enables separate control of the amplitude and phase of an optical carrier, simply by controlling the power of two stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) pumps. This technique is used to implement a microwave photonic phase shifter with record performance, which solves the bandwidth limitation of previous gain-transparent SBS-based phase shifters, while achieving unprecedented minimum power fluctuations, as a function of phase shift. We demonstrate 360° continuously tunable phase shift, with less than 0.25 dB output power fluctuations, over a frequency band from 1.5 to 31 GHz, limited only by the measurement equipment.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2017
Amol Choudhary; Blair Morrison; Iman Aryanfar; Shayan Shahnia; Mattia Pagani; Yang Liu; Khu Vu; Stephen J. Madden; David Marpaung; Benjamin J. Eggleton
Processing of microwave signals using photonics has several key advantages for applications in wireless communications. However, to bring photonic-based microwave signal processing to the mainstream requires a reduction of the form factor. Integration is a route for achieving high-performance, low-cost, and small-footprint microwave photonic devices. A high on-chip stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) gain is essential for synthesizing several key functionalities for advanced integrated microwave signal processing. We have optimized our on-chip SBS platform to achieve a record on-chip gain of 52 dB. In this paper, we discuss the implications of this giant gain from the viewpoint of new enabled technologies. The giant gain can be distributed over wide frequencies, which can be exploited for the realization of reconfigurable microwave bandpass, bandstop, and multiband filters. High gain also enables the demonstration of low-threshold on-chip lasers, which can be of relevance for a low-noise radio-frequency signal generation. These wide ranges of functionalities are made possible by the breakthrough on-chip gain makes Brillouin-based microwave photonic signal processing a promising approach for real-world implementation in the near future.
arXiv: Optics | 2015
Mattia Pagani; Blair Morrison; Yanbing Zhang; Alvaro Casas-Bedoya; Timo Aalto; Mikko Harjanne; Markku Kapulainen; Benjamin J. Eggleton; David Marpaung
Instantaneous frequency measurement (IFM) of microwave signals is a fundamental functionality for applications ranging from electronic warfare to biomedical technology. Photonic techniques, and nonlinear optical interactions in particular, have the potential to broaden the frequency measurement range beyond the limits of electronic IFM systems. The key lies in efficiently harnessing optical mixing in an integrated nonlinear platform, with low losses. In this work, we exploit the low loss of a 35 cm long, thick silicon waveguide, to efficiently harness Kerr nonlinearity, and demonstrate the first on-chip four-wave mixing (FWM) based IFM system. We achieve a large 40 GHz measurement bandwidth and record-low measurement error. Finally, we discuss the future prospect of integrating the whole IFM system on a silicon chip to enable the first reconfigurable, broadband IFM receiver with low-latency.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2014
Mattia Pagani; Erwin H. W. Chan; Robert A. Minasian
The linearity of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) is studied in detail for the first time. A closed-form expression which measures the linearity of an SBS system is derived. This expression allows one to design the region of linear operation, and the amount of Brillouin gain of an SBS system, by altering some basic system parameters. The theory presented is experimentally verified using an SBS-based microwave photonic filter structure. The effect of the length of the Brillouin medium on the linearity of the filter is investigated, and a 9.7 dB extension in the dynamic range is demonstrated by reducing the length of the fibre used as the Brillouin medium, from 25 to 0.57 km, while the filter stopband rejection level remains 30 dB.
Optics Express | 2016
Iman Aryanfar; Amol Choudhary; Shayan Shahnia; Mattia Pagani; Yang Liu; David Marpaung; Benjamin J. Eggleton
In the microwave domain, signal interference bandstop filters with high extinction and wide stopbands are achieved through destructive interference of two signals. Implementation of this filtering concept using RF photonics will lead to unique filters with high performance, enhanced tuning range and reconfigurability. Here we demonstrate an RF photonic signal interference filter, achieved through the combination of precise synthesis of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) loss with advanced phase and amplitude tailoring of RF modulation sidebands. We achieve a square-shaped, 20-dB extinction RF photonic filter over a tunable bandwidth of up to 1 GHz with a central frequency tuning range of 16 GHz using a low SBS loss of ~3 dB. Wideband destructive interference in this novel filter leads to the decoupling of the filter suppression from its bandwidth and shape factor. This allows the creation of a filter with all-optimized qualities.
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2016
Moritz Merklein; Alvaro Casas-Bedoya; David Marpaung; Thomas F. S. Büttner; Mattia Pagani; Blair Morrison; Irina V. Kabakova; Benjamin J. Eggleton
The last few years have seen major progress in harnessing on-chip photon-phonon interactions, leading to a wide range of demonstrations of new functionalities. Utilizing not only the optical response of a nonlinear waveguide-but also acoustic resonances-enables the realization of microwave devices with unprecedented performance, otherwise hard to achieve in all-optical processing schemes or electronically. Here, we overview on-chip stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) with special emphasis on microwave sources and microwave signal processing schemes. We review the different material platforms and structures for on-chip SBS, ranging from chalcogenide rib waveguides to hybrid silicon/silicon-nitride structures, high-Q photonic-phononic silica microresonators, and suspended silicon nanowires. We show that the paradigm shift in SBS research-from long length of fibers to chip-scale devices-is now moving toward fully integrated photonic-phononic CMOS chips.
optical fiber communication conference | 2016
David Marpaung; Iman Aryanfar; Alvaro Casas-Bedoya; Amol Choudhary; Hengyun Jiang; Blair Morrison; Mattia Pagani; Shayan Shahnia; Khu Vu; Duk-Yong Choi; Steve Madden; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton
This paper gives an overview of the applications of on-chip stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) in RF photonic signal processing, including for high extinction notch filtering, tunable phase shifter, instantaneous frequency measurement, and bandwidth-reconfigurable signal processing.
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Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems
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