Tjibbe de Vries
Eindhoven University of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tjibbe de Vries.
Nature | 2004
Mt Martin Hill; H.J.S. Dorren; Tjibbe de Vries; X.J.M. Leijtens; Jan Hendrik den Besten; Barry Smalbrugge; Ys Yok-Siang Oei; Hans Binsma; G.D. Khoe; Mk Meint Smit
The increasing speed of fibre-optic-based telecommunications has focused attention on high-speed optical processing of digital information. Complex optical processing requires a high-density, high-speed, low-power optical memory that can be integrated with planar semiconductor technology for buffering of decisions and telecommunication data. Recently, ring lasers with extremely small size and low operating power have been made, and we demonstrate here a memory element constructed by interconnecting these microscopic lasers. Our device occupies an area of 18 × 40 µm2 on an InP/InGaAsP photonic integrated circuit, and switches within 20 ps with 5.5 fJ optical switching energy. Simulations show that the element has the potential for much smaller dimensions and switching times. Large numbers of such memory elements can be densely integrated and interconnected on a photonic integrated circuit: fast digital optical information processing systems employing large-scale integration should now be viable.
Semiconductor Science and Technology | 2014
Mk Meint Smit; X.J.M. Leijtens; H.P.M.M. Ambrosius; E.A.J.M. Bente; Jos J. G. M. van der Tol; Barry Smalbrugge; Tjibbe de Vries; E.J. Geluk; Jeroen Bolk; René van Veldhoven; Lm Luc Augustin; Peter Thijs; Domenico D’Agostino; Hadi Rabbani; K Katarzyna Lawniczuk; St Stanislaw Stopinski; Saeed Tahvili; A Antonio Corradi; E Emil Kleijn; Do Dzmitry Dzibrou; M. Felicetti; E Elton Bitincka; V Valentina Moskalenko; Jing Zhao; Rm Rui Santos; G Giovanni Gilardi; W Weiming Yao; Ka Kevin Williams; Patty Stabile; P. I. Kuindersma
Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) are considered as the way to make photonic systems or subsystems cheap and ubiquitous. PICs still are several orders of magnitude more expensive than their microelectronic counterparts, which has restricted their application to a few niche markets. Recently, a novel approach in photonic integration is emerging which will reduce the R&D and prototyping costs and the throughput time of PICs by more than an order of magnitude. It will bring the application of PICs that integrate complex and advanced photonic functionality on a single chip within reach for a large number of small and larger companies and initiate a breakthrough in the application of Photonic ICs. The paper explains the concept of generic photonic integration technology using the technology developed by the COBRA research institute of TU Eindhoven as an example, and it describes the current status and prospects of generic InP-based integration technology.
ACS Nano | 2008
Dsh Dimitri Charrier; M Martijn Kemerink; E Barry Smalbrugge; Tjibbe de Vries; Raj René Janssen
Noncontact potentiometry or scanning Kelvin probe microscopy (SKPM) is a widely used technique to study charge injection and transport in (in)organic devices by measuring a laterally resolved local potential. This technique suffers from the significant drawback that experimentally obtained curves do not generally reflect the true potential profile in the device due to nonlocal coupling between the probing tip and the device. In this work, we quantitatively explain the experimental SKPM response and by doing so directly link theoretical device models to real observables. In particular, the model quantitatively explains the effects of the tip-sample distance and the dependence on the orientation of the probing tip with respect to the device.
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 2006
R Richard Nötzel; S Sanguan Anantathanasarn; René van Veldhoven; Frank W. M. van Otten; Tj Tom Eijkemans; Achim Trampert; Biswarup Satpati; Y Yohan Barbarin; E.A.J.M. Bente; Ys Yok-Siang Oei; Tjibbe de Vries; E.J. Geluk; Barry Smalbrugge; Mk Meint Smit; Jh Joachim Wolter
Wavelength-tunable InAs quantum dots (QDs) embedded in lattice-matched InGaAsP on InP(100) substrates are grown by metalorganic vapor-phase epitaxy (MOVPE). As/P exchange, which causes a QD size and an emission wavelength that are very large, is suppressed by decreasing the QD growth temperature and V–III flow ratio. As/P exchange, QD size and emission wavelength are then reproducibly controlled by the thickness of ultrathin [0–2 monolayers (ML)] GaAs interlayers underneath the QDs. Submonolayer GaAs coverages result in a shape transition from QDs to quantum dashes for a low V–III flow ratio. It is the combination of reduced growth temperature and V–III flow ratio with the insertion of GaAs interlayers of greater than 1 ML thickness which allows the tuning of the emission wavelength of QDs at room temperature in the 1.55 µm wavelength range. Temperature-dependent photoluminescence (PL) measurements reveal the excellent optical properties of the QDs. Widely stacked QD layers are reproduced with identical PL emission to increase the active volume while closely stacked QD layers reveal a systematic PL redshift and linewidth reduction due to vertical electronic coupling, which is proven by the fact that the linear polarization of the cleaved-side PL changes from in-plane to isotropic. Ridge-waveguide laser diodes with stacked QD layers for their active regions exhibit threshold currents at room temperature in continuous-wave mode that are among the lowest threshold currents achieved for InAs/InP QD lasers operating in the 1.55 µm wavelength range.
international conference on group iv photonics | 2009
Thijs Spuesens; Liu Liu; Tjibbe de Vries; Pedro Rojo Romeo; Philippe Regreny; Dries Van Thourhout
Microdisk lasers heterogeneously Integrated with SOI are promising sources for photonic Integrated circuits based on silicon. The microdisk lasers are only a few micrometers In size and they allow for wafer scale fabrication. We have demonstrated a new design of an electrically Injected microdisk laser bonded on SOI with a considerable Improvement of the performance. We observed threshold currents as low as 350 μΑ and output power up to 120 μW for a 7.5 μm microdisk diameter under continuous-wave operation. Compared to previous results this comes down to a 30% reduction of the threshold current and a maximum output power which is increased by more than a factor of 10.
Nature Materials | 2011
Em Erik Roeling; Wc Wijnand Germs; Barry Smalbrugge; Ej Erik Jan Geluk; Tjibbe de Vries; René A. J. Janssen; M Martijn Kemerink
The possibility to extract work from periodic, undirected forces has intrigued scientists for over a century—in particular, the rectification of undirected motion of particles by ratchet potentials, which are periodic but asymmetric functions. Introduced by Smoluchowski and Feynman to study the (dis)ability to generate motion from an equilibrium situation, ratchets operate out of equilibrium, where the second law of thermodynamics no longer applies. Although ratchet systems have been both identified in nature and used in the laboratory for the directed motion of microscopic objects, electronic ratchets have been of limited use, as they typically operate at cryogenic temperatures and generate subnanoampere currents and submillivolt voltages. Here, we present organic electronic ratchets that operate up to radio frequencies at room temperature and generate currents and voltages that are orders of magnitude larger. This enables their use as a d.c. power source. We integrated the ratchets into logic circuits, in which they act as the d.c. equivalent of the a.c. transformer, and generate enough power to drive the circuitry. Our findings show that electronic ratchets may be of actual use.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2010
Aaron Albores-Mejia; Fausto Gomez-Agis; Harm J. S. Dorren; X.J.M. Leijtens; Tjibbe de Vries; Ys Yok-Siang Oei; Martijn J. R. Heck; R Richard Nötzel; D.J. Robbins; Mk Meint Smit; Ka Kevin Williams
We propose, characterise and demonstrate a photonic multistage switching circuit operating at 160 Gb/s serial line rates. The circuit is realised on a re-grown active-passive wafer exploiting multiple stages of loss-compensating semiconductor optical amplifier crossbar switch elements. Excellent 40 dB crosstalk extinction is achieved, with signal to noise ratios of up to 39 dB/0.06 nm. Low loss circuit operation is presented, with the prospect of gain if antireflection coatings are applied at the input and output facet.
Optics Express | 2014
V Valentina Moskalenko; Sylwester Latkowski; Saeed Tahvili; Tjibbe de Vries; Mk Meint Smit; E.A.J.M. Bente
In this paper, we present the detailed characterization of a semiconductor ring passively mode-locked laser with a 20 GHz repetition rate that was realized as an indium phosphide based photonic integrated circuit (PIC). Various dynamical regimes as a function of operating conditions were explored in the spectral and time domain. A record bandwidth of the optical coherent comb from a quantum well based device of 11.5 nm at 3 dB and sub-picosecond pulse generation is demonstrated.
Optics Express | 2012
Jens Hofrichter; O Oded Raz; Antonio La Porta; Thomas Morf; Pauline Mechet; Geert Morthier; Tjibbe de Vries; Harm J. S. Dorren; Bert Jan Offrein
We report on the modulation characteristics of indium phosphide (InP) based microdisks heterogeneously integrated on a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) waveguide. We present static extinction ratios and dynamic operation up to 10 Gb/s. Operation with a bit-error rate below 1 × 10(-9) is demonstrated at 2.5, 5.0 and 10.0 Gb/s and the performance is compared with that of a commercial modulator. Power penalties are analyzed with respect to the pattern length. The power consumption is calculated and compared with state-of-the-art integrated modulator concepts. We demonstrate that InP microdisk modulators combine low-power and low-voltage operation with low footprint and high-speed. Moreover, the devices can be fabricated using the same technology as for lasers, detectors and wavelength converters, making them very attractive for co-integration.
IEEE Photonics Journal | 2015
Sylwester Latkowski; Andreas Hänsel; N. Bhattacharya; Tjibbe de Vries; Lm Luc Augustin; Ka Kevin Williams; Mk Meint Smit; E.A.J.M. Bente
We report a novel type of monolithically integrated tunable semiconductor laser. The tuning is achieved by three intracavity Mach-Zehnder interferometers, realized in passive waveguides and using voltage-controlled electro-optic phase modulators requiring only four control voltages. The potential of the design is demonstrated by a realized laser system that shows an optical linewidth of 363 kHz, output power of 3 mW, and a record tuning range of 74.3 nm. Such a continuous wavelength span is in excess of any monolithic semiconductor laser reported up to date. Precision of the tuning mechanism is demonstrated by a scan over a 0.89-GHz-wide absorption line of acetylene. The laser design is suitable for a number of applications, including gas spectroscopy, telecommunication, and optical coherence tomography. The laser has been fabricated in a multi-project wafer run on an indium phosphide-based generic photonic foundry platform and demonstrates the potential of these technology platforms.