Integrated lithium niobate photonic computing circuit based on efficient and high-speed electro-optic conversion

Publication information:

Yaowen Hu, Yunxiang Song, Xinrui Zhu, Xiangwen Guo, Shengyuan Lu, Qihang Zhang, Lingyan He, Cornelis Franken, Keith Powell, Hana Warner, Daniel Assumpcao, Dylan Renaud, Ying Wang, Leticia Magalhaes, Victoria Rosborough, Amirhassan Shams-Ansari, Xudong Li, Rebecca Cheng, Kevin Luke, Kiyoul Yang, George Barbastathis, Mian Zhang, Di Zhu, Leif Johansson, Andreas Beling, Neil Sinclair, and Marko Loncar. 2025. “Integrated Lithium Niobate Photonic Computing Circuit Based on Efficient and High-Speed Electro-Optic Conversion”. Nature Communications, 16, Pp. 8178

Abstract

The surge in artificial intelligence applications calls for scalable, high-speed, and low-energy computation methods. Computing with photons is promising due to the intrinsic parallelism, high bandwidth, and low latency of photons. However, current photonic computing architectures are limited by the speed and energy consumption associated with electronic-to-optical data transfer, i.e., electro-optic conversion. Here, we demonstrate a thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) computing circuit that addresses this challenge, leveraging both highly efficient electro-optic modulation and the spatial scalability of TFLN photonics. Our circuit is capable of computing at 43.8 GOPS/channel while consuming 0.0576 pJ/OP, and we demonstrate various inference tasks with high accuracy, including the classification of binary data and complex images. Heightening the integration level, we show another TFLN computing circuit that is combined with a hybrid-integrated distributed-feedback laser and heterogeneous-integrated modified uni-traveling carrier photodiode. Our results show that the TFLN photonic platform holds promise to complement silicon photonics and diffractive optics for photonic computing, with extensions to ultrafast signal processing and ranging.