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Dive into the research topics where Peter Ingo Borel is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Ingo Borel.


Nature | 2006

Strained silicon as a new electro-optic material.

Rune Shim Jacobsen; Karin Nordström Andersen; Peter Ingo Borel; Jacob Fage-Pedersen; Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Ole Hansen; Martin Kristensen; Andrei V. Lavrinenko; Gaid Moulin; Haiyan Ou; Christophe Peucheret; Beata Zsigri; Anders Bjarklev

For decades, silicon has been the material of choice for mass fabrication of electronics. This is in contrast to photonics, where passive optical components in silicon have only recently been realized. The slow progress within silicon optoelectronics, where electronic and optical functionalities can be integrated into monolithic components based on the versatile silicon platform, is due to the limited active optical properties of silicon. Recently, however, a continuous-wave Raman silicon laser was demonstrated; if an effective modulator could also be realized in silicon, data processing and transmission could potentially be performed by all-silicon electronic and optical components. Here we have discovered that a significant linear electro-optic effect is induced in silicon by breaking the crystal symmetry. The symmetry is broken by depositing a straining layer on top of a silicon waveguide, and the induced nonlinear coefficient, χ(2) ≈ 15 pm V-1, makes it possible to realize a silicon electro-optic modulator. The strain-induced linear electro-optic effect may be used to remove a bottleneck in modern computers by replacing the electronic bus with a much faster optical alternative.


Optics Express | 2006

Photonic crystal waveguides with semi-slow light and tailored dispersion properties.

Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Andrei V. Lavrinenko; Jacob Fage-Pedersen; Peter Ingo Borel

We demonstrate a concept for tailoring the group velocity and dispersion properties for light propagating in a planar photonic crystal waveguide. By perturbing the holes adjacent to the waveguide core it is possible to increase the useful bandwidth below the light-line and obtain a photonic crystal waveguide with either vanishing, positive, or negative group velocity dispersion and semi-slow light. We realize experimentally a silicon-on-insulator photonic crystal waveguide having nearly constant group velocity ~c(0)/34 in an 11-nm bandwidth below the silica-line.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2003

A compact two-dimensional grating coupler used as a polarization splitter

Dirk Taillaert; Harold Chong; Peter Ingo Borel; Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; R.M. De La Rue; Roel Baets

We demonstrate a novel polarization splitter based on a two-dimensional grating etched in a silicon-on-insulator waveguide. The device couples orthogonal modes from a single-mode optical fiber into identical modes of two planar ridge waveguides. The extinction ratio is better than 18 dB in the wavelength range of 1530-1560 nm and the coupling efficiency is approximately 20%. The device is very compact and couples light only to transverse-electric modes of the planar waveguides. Therefore, it may be used in a polarization diversity configuration to implement a polarization insensitive photonic integrated circuit based on photonic crystal waveguides.


Optics Express | 2007

Photonic-crystal waveguide biosensor.

Nina Skivesen; Amélie Têtu; Martin Kristensen; Jørgen Kjems; Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Peter Ingo Borel

A photonic-crystal waveguide sensor is presented for biosensing. The sensor is applied for refractive index measurements and detection of protein-concentrations. Concentrations around 10 mug/ml (0.15muMolar) are measured with excellent signal to noise ratio, and a broad, dynamic refractive index sensing range extending from air to high viscous fluids is presented.


Optics Express | 2004

Topology optimization and fabrication of photonic crystal structures

Peter Ingo Borel; Anders Harpøth; Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Martin Kristensen; P. Shi; Jakob Søndergaard Jensen; Ole Sigmund

Topology optimization is used to design a planar photonic crystal waveguide component resulting in significantly enhanced functionality. Exceptional transmission through a photonic crystal waveguide Z-bend is obtained using this inverse design strategy. The design has been realized in a silicon-on-insulator based photonic crystal waveguide. A large low loss bandwidth of more than 200 nm for the bandgap polarization is experimentally confirmed.


Optics Express | 2004

Comprehensive FDTD modelling of photonic crystal waveguide components

Andrei V. Lavrinenko; Peter Ingo Borel; Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Morten Thorhauge; Anders Harpøth; Martin Kristensen; Tapio Niemi; Harold Chong

Planar photonic crystal waveguide structures have been modelled using the finite-difference-time-domain method and perfectly matched layers have been employed as boundary conditions. Comprehensive numerical calculations have been performed and compared to experimentally obtained transmission spectra for various photonic crystal waveguides. It is found that within the experimental fabrication tolerances the calculations correctly predict the measured transmission levels and other major transmission features.


New Journal of Physics | 2006

Photonic crystal and quantum dot technologies for all-optical switch and logic device

Kiyoshi Asakawa; Yoshimasa Sugimoto; Yoshinori Watanabe; Nobuhiko Ozaki; Akio Mizutani; Yoshiaki Takata; Yoshinori Kitagawa; Hiroshi Ishikawa; Naoki Ikeda; Koichi Awazu; Xiaomin Wang; Akira Watanabe; Shigeru Nakamura; Shunsuke Ohkouchi; Kuon Inoue; Martin Kristensen; Ole Sigmund; Peter Ingo Borel; Roel Baets

Nano-photonic technologies of GaAs-based two-dimensional photonic crystal (2DPC) slab waveguides (WGs) and InAs-based quantum dots (QDs) are reviewed for a symmetrical Mach?Zehnder (SMZ) type, ultra-small and ultra-fast all-optical switch (PC-SMZ) and logic device. As the first phase, ultra-fast (~ps) and ultra-low energy (~100?fJ) switching has been demonstrated using a chip 600??m?300??m in size. The second phase is to create a PC-SMZ-based ultra-fast photonic logic switch with a latch function for a future ultra-fast photonic digital processor. One of the priority subjects is to establish a new design method, i.e., topology optimization (TO) method of 2DPC-WGs with wide/flat bandwidth, high transmittance and low reflectivity. Another one is to develop selective-area-grown, high-density and highly uniform InAs QDs with large optical nonlinearity (ONL) by using a metal-mask (MM) molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth method. Recent results regarding these two subjects encourage us to reach the final goal.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2011

64-Tb/s, 8 b/s/Hz, PDM-36QAM Transmission Over 320 km Using Both Pre- and Post-Transmission Digital Signal Processing

Xiang Zhou; Jianjun Yu; Ming-Fang Huang; Yin Shao; Ting Wang; Lynn E. Nelson; Peter Magill; Martin Birk; Peter Ingo Borel; David W. Peckham; Robert Lingle; Benyuan Zhu

We report the successful transmission of 64 Tb/s capacity (640 ×107 Gb/s with 12.5 GHz channel spacing) over 320 km reach utilizing 8-THz of spectrum in the C+L -bands at a net spectral efficiency of 8 bit/s/Hz. Such a result is accomplished by the use of raised-cosine pulse-shaped PDM-36QAM modulation, intradyne detection, both pre- and post-transmission digital equalization, and ultra-large-area fiber. We discuss in detail the digital modulation technology and signal processing algorithms used in the experiment, including a new two-stage, blind frequency-search-based frequency-offset estimation algorithm and a more computationally efficient carrier-phase recovery algorithm.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2006

Wavelength-division demultiplexing using photonic crystal waveguides

Tapio Niemi; Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Kristian Knak Hede; Anders Harpøth; Peter Ingo Borel; Martin Kristensen

We demonstrate a new device concept for wavelength division demultiplexing based on planar photonic crystal waveguides. The filtering of wavelength channels is realized by shifting the cutoff frequency of the fundamental photonic bandgap mode in consecutive sections of the waveguide. The shift is realized by modifying the size of the border holes. Simulations and an experimental realization of a four-channel coarse wavelength division demultiplexer are described.


Optics Letters | 2004

Ultralow-loss 3-dB photonic crystal waveguide splitter

Lars Hagedorn Frandsen; Peter Ingo Borel; Y. X. Zhuang; Anders Harpøth; Morten Thorhauge; Martin Kristensen; Wim Bogaerts; Pieter Dumon; Rgf Roel Baets; Vincent Wiaux; Johan Wouters; S. Beckx

A photonic crystal waveguide splitter that exhibits ultralow-loss 3-dB splitting for TE-polarized light is fabricated in silicon-on-insulator material by use of deep UV lithography. The high performance is achieved by use of a Y junction, which is designed to ensure single-mode operation, and low-loss 60 degrees bends. Zero-loss 3-dB output is experimentally obtained in the range 1560-1585 nm. Results from three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain modeling with no adjustable parameters are found to be in excellent agreement with the experimental results.

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Lars Hagedorn Frandsen

Technical University of Denmark

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Andrei V. Lavrinenko

Technical University of Denmark

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Ole Sigmund

Technical University of Denmark

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Morten Thorhauge

Technical University of Denmark

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