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Dive into the research topics where Maurizio Burla is active.

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Featured researches published by Maurizio Burla.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2010

Novel Ring Resonator-Based Integrated Photonic Beamformer for Broadband Phased Array Receive Antennas—Part I: Design and Performance Analysis

Arjan Meijerink; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; R. Meijerink; Leimeng Zhuang; David Marpaung; M.J. Bentum; Maurizio Burla; Jaco Verpoorte; P. Jorna; A. Hulzinga; W.C. van Etten

A novel optical beamformer concept is introduced that can be used for seamless control of the reception angle in broadband wireless receivers employing a large phased array antenna (PAA). The core of this beamformer is an optical beamforming network (OBFN), using ring resonator-based broadband delays, and coherent optical combining. The electro-optical conversion is performed by means of single-sideband suppressed carrier modulation, employing a common laser, Mach-Zehnder modulators, and a common optical sideband filter after the OBFN. The unmodulated laser signal is then re-injected in order to perform balanced coherent optical detection, for the opto-electrical conversion. This scheme minimizes the requirements on the complexity of the OBFN, and has potential for compact realization by means of full integration on chip. The impact of the optical beamformer concept on the performance of the full receiver system is analyzed, by modeling the combination of the PAA and the beamformer as an equivalent two-port RF system. The results are illustrated by a numerical example of a PAA receiver for satellite TV reception, showing that - when properly designed - the beamformer hardly affects the sensitivity of the receiver.


Optics Express | 2013

Silicon nitride microwave photonic circuits.

C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Like Zhuang; Caterina Taddei; Arne Leinse; Rene Heideman; Paulus van Dijk; Ruud Oldenbeuving; David Marpaung; Maurizio Burla; Maurizio Buria; Klaus J. Boller

We present an overview of several microwave photonic processing functionalities based on combinations of Mach-Zehnder and ring resonator filters using the high index contrast silicon nitride (TriPleX™) waveguide technology. All functionalities are built using the same basic building blocks, namely straight waveguides, phase tuning elements and directional couplers. We recall previously shown measurements on high spurious free dynamic range microwave photonic (MWP) link, ultra-wideband pulse generation, instantaneous frequency measurements, Hilbert transformers, microwave polarization networks and demonstrate new measurements and functionalities on a 16 channel optical beamforming network and modulation format transformer as well as an outlook on future microwave photonic platform integration, which will lead to a significantly reduced footprint and thereby enables the path to commercially viable MWP systems.


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.


Optics Express | 2011

Low-loss, high-index-contrast Si3N4/SiO2 optical waveguides for optical delay lines in microwave photonics signal processing

Leimeng Zhuang; David Marpaung; Maurizio Burla; Willem P. Beeker; Arne Leinse; C.G.H. Roeloffzen

We report the design and characterization of Si₃N₄/SiO₂ optical waveguides which are specifically developed for optical delay lines in microwave photonics (MWP) signal processing applications. The waveguide structure consists of a stack of two Si₃N₄ stripes and SiO₂ as an intermediate layer. Characterization of the waveguide propagation loss was performed in race track-shaped optical ring resonators (ORRs) with a free-spectral range of 20 GHz and a bending radius varied from 50 μm to 125 μm. A waveguide propagation loss as low as 0.095 dB/cm was measured in the ORRs with bend radii ≥ 70 μm. Using the waveguide technology two types of RF-modulated optical sideband filters with high sideband suppression and small transition band consisting of an Mach-Zehnder interferometer and ORRs are also demonstrated. These results demonstrate the potential of the waveguide technology to be applied to construct compact on-chip MWP signal processors.


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 | 2013

Integrated waveguide Bragg gratings for microwave photonics signal processing

Maurizio Burla; Luis Romero Cortés; Ming Li; Xu Wang; Lukas Chrostowski; José Azaña

Integrated Microwave photonics (IMWP) signal processing using Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) has attracted a great deal of attention in recent years as an enabling technology for a number of functionalities not attainable by purely microwave solutions. In this context, integrated waveguide Bragg grating (WBG) devices constitute a particularly attractive approach thanks to their compactness and flexibility in producing arbitrarily defined amplitude and phase responses, by directly acting on coupling coefficient and perturbations of the grating profile. In this article, we review recent advances in the field of integrated WBGs applied to MWP, analyzing the advantages leveraged by an integrated realization. We provide a perspective on the exciting possibilities offered by the silicon photonics platform in the field of MWP, potentially enabling integration of highly-complex active and passive functionalities with high yield on a single chip, with a particular focus on the use of WBGs as basic building blocks for linear filtering operations. We demonstrate the versatility of WBG-based devices by proposing and experimentally demonstrating a novel, continuously-tunable, integrated true-time-delay (TTD) line based on a very simple dual phase-shifted WBG (DPS-WBG).


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2014

Multiwavelength-Integrated Optical Beamformer Based on Wavelength Division Multiplexing for 2-D Phased Array Antennas

Maurizio Burla; David Marpaung; Leimeng Zhuang; M.R.H. Khan; Arne Leinse; Willem P. Beeker; Marcel Hoekman; Rene Heideman; C.G.H. Roeloffzen

A novel, hardware-compressive architecture for broadband and continuously tunable integrated optical true-time-delay beamformers for phased array antennas is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The novel idea consists in employing the frequency-periodic response of optical ring resonator (ORR) filters in conjunction with on-chip wavelength division multiplexing (WDM), in order to create multiple signal paths on an individual beamformer channel. This novel idea dramatically reduces the network complexity and, in turn, its footprint on the wafer. This allows the integration of an unprecedented number of delay channels on a single chip, ultimately overcoming the main limitation of integrated optical beamformers, that is, the difficulty to feed antenna arrays with many elements using a single integrated chip. A novel beamformer has been realized based on this technique, using the ultra-low-loss TriPleX waveguide platform with CMOS-compatible fabrication equipment, and its functionality is demonstrated over an instantaneous bandwidth from 2 to 10 GHz. This result, at the best of our knowledge, represents at the same time the record instantaneous bandwidth (8 GHz) for an optical beamformer based on ORR, and the first demonstration of an integrated beamformer where the periodic response of ORRs is exploited to process signals from different antenna elements, simultaneously, using a single delay line.


Optics Express | 2011

Impulse radio ultrawideband pulse shaper based on a programmable photonic chip frequency discriminator

David Marpaung; Ludovic Chevalier; Maurizio Burla; C.G.H. Roeloffzen

We report and experimentally demonstrate the generation of impulse radio ultrawideband (UWB) pulses using a photonic chip frequency discriminator. The discriminator consists of three add-drop optical ring resonators (ORRs) which are fully programmable using thermo-optical tuning. This discriminator chip in combination with a phase modulator forms a temporal differentiator where phase modulation is converted to intensity modulation (PM-IM conversion). By means of tailoring the discriminator response using either the individual or the cascade of drop and through responses of the ORRs, first-order or second-order temporal differentiations are obtained. Using this principle, the generation of UWB monocycle, doublet and modified doublet pulses are demonstrated. The use of this CMOS-compatible discriminator is promising for the realization of a compact and low cost UWB transmitter.


IEEE Microwave Magazine | 2015

RF Engineering Meets Optoelectronics: Progress in Integrated Microwave Photonics

Stavros Iezekiel; Maurizio Burla; Jonathan Klamkin; David Marpaung; José Capmany

Integrated microwave photonics (IMWP) is concerned with applying integrated photonics technology to microwave photonic systems. It is one of the most active and exciting areas of current research and development in microwave photonics (MWP), building upon the impressive foundations of integrated photonics in various systems involving material platforms such as indium phosphide (InP) and silicon nitride (Si3N4). The aim of this article is to explain to the wider microwave engineering community the significance of the new field of IMWP and to describe how it may potentially be applied to improve the performance and capabilities of microwave and millimeter-wave (mmWave) systems. Just as the microwave monolithic integrated circuit (MMIC) has revolutionized active microwave circuits, IMWP is poised to open up new applications for microwave engineering that take advantage of the unique functionalities offered by photonics, especially with regard to its large bandwidth.


Applied Optics | 2012

System integration and radiation pattern measurements of a phased array antenna employing an integrated photonic beamformer for radio astronomy applications

Maurizio Burla; C.G.H. Roeloffzen; Leimeng Zhuang; David Marpaung; M.R.H. Khan; Peter Maat; Klaas Dijkstra; Arne Leinse; Marcel Hoekman; Rene Heideman

In this paper we describe the system integration and the experimental demonstration of a photonically beamformed four-element receiving array antenna for radio astronomy applications. To our knowledge, the work described here is the first demonstration of the squint-free, continuously tunable beamsteering capability offered by an integrated photonic beamformer based on optical ring resonator true-time-delay units, with measured radiation patterns. The integrated beamformer is realized in a low loss, complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) compatible optical waveguide technology. The measurements show a wideband, continuous beamsteering operation over a steering angle of 23.5 degrees and an instantaneous bandwidth of 500 MHz limited only by the measurement setup.

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David Marpaung

Centre for Ultrahigh Bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems

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José Azaña

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Lukas Chrostowski

University of British Columbia

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