nan Purnawirman
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by nan Purnawirman.
Optics Letters | 2013
Purnawirman; Jie Sun; Thomas N. Adam; G. Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; E. Shah Hosseini; Michael R. Watts
We report on integrated erbium-doped waveguide lasers designed for silicon photonic systems. The distributed Bragg reflector laser cavities consist of silicon nitride waveguide and grating features defined by wafer-scale immersion lithography and a top erbium-doped aluminum oxide layer deposited as the final step in the fabrication process. The resulting inverted ridge waveguide yields high optical intensity overlap with the active medium for both the 0.98 μm pump (89%) and 1.5 μm laser (87%) wavelengths with a pump-laser intensity overlap of >93%. We obtain output powers of up to 5 mW and show lasing at widely spaced wavelengths within both the C and L bands of the erbium gain spectrum (1536, 1561, and 1596 nm).
Optics Express | 2014
Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Ehsan Shah Hosseini; Purnawirman; Zhan Su; Thomas N. Adam; Gerald Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Michael R. Watts
We demonstrate monolithic 160-µm-diameter rare-earth-doped microring lasers using silicon-compatible methods. Pump light injection and laser output coupling are achieved via an integrated silicon nitride waveguide. We measure internal quality factors of up to 3.8 × 105 at 980 nm and 5.7 × 105 at 1550 nm in undoped microrings. In erbium- and ytterbium-doped microrings we observe single-mode 1.5-µm and 1.0-µm laser emission with slope efficiencies of 0.3 and 8.4%, respectively. Their small footprints, tens of microwatts output powers and sub-milliwatt thresholds introduce such rare-earth-doped microlasers as scalable light sources for silicon-based microphotonic devices and systems.
Optics Letters | 2016
Gurpreet Singh; Purnawirman; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Nanxi Li; Emir Salih Magden; Michele Moresco; Thomas N. Adam; G. Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Michael R. Watts
This Letter reports on an optical pumping scheme, termed resonant pumping, for an erbium-doped distributed feedback (DFB) waveguide laser. The scheme uses two mirrors on either side of the DFB laser, forming a pump cavity that recirculates the unabsorbed pump light. Symmetric distributed Bragg reflectors are used as the mirrors and are designed by matching the external and internal quality factors of the cavity. Experimental demonstration shows lasing at an optical communication wavelength of around 1560 nm and an improvement of 1.8 times in the lasing efficiency, when the DFB laser is pumped on-resonance.
Optics Letters | 2017
Nanxi Li; Purnawirman; Zhan Su; E. Salih Magden; Patrick T. Callahan; Katia Shtyrkova; Ming Xin; Alfonso Ruocco; Christopher Baiocco; Erich P. Ippen; Franz X. Kärtner; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Diedrik Vermeulen; Michael R. Watts
Mid-infrared laser sources are of great interest for various applications, including light detection and ranging, spectroscopy, communication, trace-gas detection, and medical sensing. Silicon photonics is a promising platform that enables these applications to be integrated on a single chip with low cost and compact size. Silicon-based high-power lasers have been demonstrated at 1.55 μm wavelength, while in the 2 μm region, to the best of our knowledge, high-power, high-efficiency, and monolithic light sources have been minimally investigated. In this Letter, we report on high-power CMOS-compatible thulium-doped distributed feedback and distributed Bragg reflector lasers with single-mode output powers up to 267 and 387 mW, and slope efficiencies of 14% and 23%, respectively. More than 70 dB side-mode suppression ratio is achieved for both lasers. This work extends the applicability of silicon photonic microsystems in the 2 μm region.
Optics Letters | 2017
Purnawirman; Nanxi Li; E. Salih Magden; Gurpreet Singh; Michele Moresco; Thomas N. Adam; G. Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Michael R. Watts
We demonstrate monolithic integration of a wavelength division multiplexed light source for silicon photonics by a cascade of erbium-doped aluminum oxide (Al2O3:Er3+) distributed feedback (DFB) lasers. Four DFB lasers with uniformly spaced emission wavelengths are cascaded in a series to simultaneously operate with no additional tuning required. A total output power of -10.9 dBm is obtained from the four DFBs with an average side mode suppression ratio of 38.1±2.5 dB. We characterize the temperature-dependent wavelength shift of the cascaded DFBs and observe a uniform dλ/dT of 0.02 nm/°C across all four lasers.
Optics Express | 2016
Nanxi Li; Erman Timurdogan; Christopher V. Poulton; Matthew J. Byrd; Emir Salih Magden; Zhan Su; Purnawirman; Gerald Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Diedrik Vermeulen; Michael R. Watts
We demonstrate an erbium-doped fiber laser with a tunable silicon microring cavity. We measured a narrow laser linewidth (16 kHz) and single-mode continuous-wave emission over the C-band (1530nm-to-1560nm) at a swept-wavelength rate of 22,600nm/s or 3106THz/s.
Optics Express | 2017
Purnawirman; Nanxi Li; Emir Salih Magden; Gurpreet Singh; Neetesh Singh; Anna Baldycheva; Ehsan Shah Hosseini; Jie Sun; Michele Moresco; Thomas N. Adam; G. Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Michael R. Watts
We report ultra-narrow-linewidth erbium-doped aluminum oxide (Al2O3:Er3+) distributed feedback (DFB) lasers with a wavelength-insensitive silicon-compatible waveguide design. The waveguide consists of five silicon nitride (SiNx) segments buried under silicon dioxide (SiO2) with a layer Al2O3:Er3+ deposited on top. This design has a high confinement factor (> 85%) and a near perfect (> 98%) intensity overlap for an octave-spanning range across near infra-red wavelengths (950-2000 nm). We compare the performance of DFB lasers in discrete quarter phase shifted (QPS) cavity and distributed phase shifted (DPS) cavity. Using QPS-DFB configuration, we obtain maximum output powers of 0.41 mW, 0.76 mW, and 0.47 mW at widely spaced wavelengths within both the C and L bands of the erbium gain spectrum (1536 nm, 1566 nm, and 1596 nm). In a DPS cavity, we achieve an order of magnitude improvement in maximum output power (5.43 mW) and a side mode suppression ratio (SMSR) of > 59.4 dB at an emission wavelength of 1565 nm. We observe an ultra-narrow linewidth of ΔνDPS = 5.3 ± 0.3 kHz for the DPS-DFB laser, as compared to ΔνQPS = 30.4 ± 1.1 kHz for the QPS-DFB laser, measured by a recirculating self-heterodyne delayed interferometer (R-SHDI).
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Nanxi Li; Zhan Su; Purnawirman; E. Salih Magden; Christopher V. Poulton; Alfonso Ruocco; Neetesh Singh; Matthew J. Byrd; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Gerald Leake; Michael R. Watts
In an optical interconnect circuit, microring resonators (MRRs) are commonly used in wavelength division multiplexing systems. To make the MRR and laser synchronized, the resonance wavelength of the MRR needs to be thermally controlled, and the power consumption becomes significant with a high-channel count. Here, we demonstrate an athermally synchronized rare-earth-doped laser and MRR. The laser comprises a Si3N4 based cavity covered with erbium-doped Al2O3 to provide gain. The low thermo-optic coefficient of Al2O3 and Si3N4 and the comparable thermal shift of the effective index in the laser and microring cross-sections enable lasing and resonance wavelength synchronization over a wide range of temperatures. The power difference between matched and unmatched channels remains greater than 15 dB from 20 to 50 °C due to a synchronized wavelength shift of 0.02 nm/°C. The athermal synchronization approach reported here is not limited to microring filters but can be applied to any Si3N4 filter with integrated lasers using rare earth ion doped Al2O3 as a gain medium to achieve system-level temperature control free operation.
optical fiber communication conference | 2014
Purnawirman; E. Shah Hosseini; Anna Baldycheva; Jie Sun; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Thomas N. Adam; G. Leake; Douglas D. Coolbaugh; Michael R. Watts
We report on DFB and DBR lasers formed from a wavelength insensitive multi-segmented silicon nitride waveguide. Using a five-segment waveguide, we obtain lasing in erbium-doped DBR (-3.6 dBm) and DFB (-7.3 dBm) cavities.
optoelectronics global conference | 2015
Nanxi Li; Purnawirman; Jonathan D. B. Bradley; Gurpreet Singh; E. Salih Magden; Jie Sun; Michael R. Watts
We report the study of self-pulsing behavior in erbium-doped fiber laser due to the ion-pair formation and scattered feedback. We observed the high doping concentration of the laser to be the main cause of the pulsing phenomenon. We also demonstrate that the self pulsing can be suppressed by resonance pumping.