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Letter

Nature Photonics 2, 242–246 (1 April 2008) | doi:10.1038/nphoton.2008.31

High-throughput silicon nanophotonic wavelength-insensitive switch for on-chip optical networks

Yurii Vlasov , William M. J. Green & Fengnian Xia

Recent advances in silicon nanophotonics, including demonstrations of ultracompact modulators, germanium waveguide photodetectors and wavelength-division multiplexers, indicate the feasibility of on-chip optical interconnects integrated with multicore microprocessors. Studies have suggested that direct replacement of part or all of the electrical interconnect wiring with point-to-point optical links may not provide sufficient power savings to make this approach attractive to chip designers. However, if high-bandwidth optical signals can be switched and routed using an on-chip silicon nanophotonic interconnection network, significant performance gains can be expected. Here we show an ultracompact (40|[nbsp]||[times]||[nbsp]|12|[nbsp]||[micro]|m2) wavelength-insensitive switch based on cascaded silicon microring resonators, which may bring this vision closer to reality by serving as a critical basic element for scalable on-chip optical networks. Fast (|[minus]|12) switching of multiple (up to 9) 40-Gbit s|[minus]|1 optical channels is demonstrated in a temperature-insensitive (|[plusmn]|15|[nbsp]||[deg]|C) device.