Relaxation of the electro-optic response in thin-film lithium niobate modulators

Citation:

Jeffrey Holzgrafe, Eric Puma, Rebecca Cheng, Hana Warner, Amirhassan Shams-Ansari, Raji Shankar, and Marko Lončar. 1/29/2024. “Relaxation of the electro-optic response in thin-film lithium niobate modulators.” Optics Express, 32, Pp. 3619. Publisher's Version
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Abstract:

Thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) is a promising electro-optic (EO) photonics platform with high modulation bandwidth, low drive voltage, and low optical loss. However, EO modulation in TFLN is known to relax on long timescales. Instead, thermo-optic heaters are often used for stable biasing, but heaters incur challenges with cross-talk, high power, and low bandwidth. Here, we characterize the low-frequency (1 mHz to 1 MHz) EO response of TFLN modulators, investigate the root cause of EO relaxation and demonstrate methods to improve bias stability. We show that relaxation-related effects can enhance EO modulation across a frequency band spanning 1kHz to 20kHz in our devices – a counter-intuitive result that can confound measurement of half-wave voltage  in TFLN modulators. We also show that EO relaxation can be slowed by more than 104-fold through control of the LN-metal interface and annealing, offering progress toward lifetime-stable EO biasing. Such robust EO biasing would enable applications for TFLN devices where cross-talk, power, and bias bandwidth are critical, such as quantum devices, high-density integrated photonics, and communications.