D

Delphine Marris‐Morini

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

ORCID: 0000-0002-1324-5029

Publishes on Photonic and Optical Devices, Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies, Advanced Photonic Communication Systems. 610 papers and 8.6k citations.

610Publications
8.6kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Roadmap on silicon photonics
David J. Thomson, Aaron Zilkie, John E. Bowers et al.|Journal of Optics|2016
Cited by 1.3k

Silicon photonics research can be dated back to the 1980s. However, the previous decade has witnessed an explosive growth in the field. Silicon photonics is a disruptive technology that is poised to revolutionize a number of application areas, for example, data centers, high-performance computing and sensing. The key driving force behind silicon photonics is the ability to use CMOS-like fabrication resulting in high-volume production at low cost. This is a key enabling factor for bringing photonics to a range of technology areas where the costs of implementation using traditional photonic elements such as those used for the telecommunications industry would be prohibitive. Silicon does however have a number of shortcomings as a photonic material. In its basic form it is not an ideal material in which to produce light sources, optical modulators or photodetectors for example. A wealth of research effort from both academia and industry in recent years has fueled the demonstration of multiple solutions to these and other problems, and as time progresses new approaches are increasingly being conceived. It is clear that silicon photonics has a bright future. However, with a growing number of approaches available, what will the silicon photonic integrated circuit of the future look like? This roadmap on silicon photonics delves into the different technology and application areas of the field giving an insight into the state-of-the-art as well as current and future challenges faced by researchers worldwide. Contributions authored by experts from both industry and academia provide an overview and outlook for the silicon waveguide platform, optical sources, optical modulators, photodetectors, integration approaches, packaging, applications of silicon photonics and approaches required to satisfy applications at mid-infrared wavelengths. Advances in science and technology required to meet challenges faced by the field in each of these areas are also addressed together with predictions of where the field is destined to reach.

42 GHz pin Germanium photodetector integrated in a silicon-on-insulator waveguide
Laurent Vivien, Johann Osmond, Jean-Marc Fédéli et al.|Optics Express|2009
Cited by 435Open Access

A compact pin Ge photodetector is integrated in submicron SOI rib waveguide. The detector length is reduced down to 15 microm using butt coupling configuration which is sufficient to totally absorb light at the wavelength of 1.55 microm. A -3 dB bandwidth of 42 GHz has been measured at a 4V reverse bias with a responsivity as high as 1 A/W at the wavelength of 1.55 microm and a low dark current density of 60 mA/cm(2). At a wavelength of 1.52 microm, a responsivity of 1 A/W is obtained under -0.5 V bias. The process is fully compatible with CMOS technology.

Zero-bias 40Gbit/s germanium waveguide photodetector on silicon
Cited by 420Open Access

We report on lateral pin germanium photodetectors selectively grown at the end of silicon waveguides. A very high optical bandwidth, estimated up to 120GHz, was evidenced in 10 µm long Ge photodetectors using three kinds of experimental set-ups. In addition, a responsivity of 0.8 A/W at 1550 nm was measured. An open eye diagrams at 40Gb/s were demonstrated under zero-bias at a wavelength of 1.55 µm.

High speed and high responsivity germanium photodetector integrated in a Silicon-On-Insulator microwaveguide
Cited by 213Open Access

We report the experimental demonstration of a germanium metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) photodetector integrated in a SOI rib waveguide. Femtosecond pulse and frequency experiments have been used to characterize those MSM Ge photodetectors. The measured bandwidth under 6V bias is about 25 GHz at 1.55 microm wavelength with a responsivity as high as 1 A/W. The used technological processes are compatible with complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology.