Ansys is committed to setting today's students up for success, by providing free simulation engineering software to students.
Ansys is committed to setting today's students up for success, by providing free simulation engineering software to students.
Ansys is committed to setting today's students up for success, by providing free simulation engineering software to students.
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ANSYS BLOG
May 10, 2022
The need for photonics to serve the large demand for data transfer in datacenters and telecommunications is growing. Like in traditional electronics design automation, photonic engineers can design photonic components at the circuit level with an ecosystem of tool providers and fabs to support it. In recent years, the field of photonics has matured to have reliable Process Design Kits (PDK), as shown in figure 1.
Photonic PDKs enable circuit and system level simulation, which is a critical part of the photonic integrated circuit (PIC) design process. The accuracy of simulation is contingent on the capability of the compact model library (CML) provided by the foundry as part of their process design kit. Foundry CMLs need to be calibrated against measurement data and capable of accurately modeling the behavior of the fabricated intrinsic photonic components and circuits. In this post, we describe steps to create a laser compact model using experimental results.
A crucial component that enables the operation of any PIC is the source of photons itself, the laser, as shown in figure 2, using a typical optical transceiver as an example.
However, lasers can have a significant impact on the performance of photonic circuits because they introduce optical noise. Additionally, their noise and output power are strongly dependent on temperature. A typical structure of a PIC laser is shown in figure 3.
The packaging of photonic integrated circuits is a complex process that involves a lot of extrinsic pieces which can potentially degrade the overall performance of the circuit, as shown in figure 4. The temperature effects can be even more pronounced in co-packaged optics or electronic-photonic monolithic solutions, where the laser can be closer to other heat generating devices and its cooling may be more difficult. Analog Photonics and Ansys engineers teamed up to create a laser compact model with temperature effects and noise accurately considered. In this post, we describe the process of creating a laser compact model in Ansys Lumerical INTERCONNECT for the newest APSUNY Active Interposer (AI) Packaging PDK v.1.0.
Laser models range from simple lookup tables to more complex physical models. The lookup table models, such as CWL (Continuous Wave Laser), are easy to setup and are computationally fast, but they might not accurately model all the important laser effects. But, the more complex physical laser models, such as DML (Directly Modulated Laser) and TWLM (Travelling Wave Laser Model), require more parameters and longer computational time. Therefore, creating a laser model for a PDK requires choosing the best model to optimally satisfy often conflicting requirements between the number of known laser parameters, the model accuracy, and the computational time.
For developing APSUNY Active Interposer (AI) Packaging PDK v.1.0, Analog Photonics and Ansys engineers worked together to create a compact model of a proprietary laser device. Analog Photonics engineers measured the temperature-dependent lasing wavelength, light-current (LIV), and relative intensity noise (RIN) characteristics, which are critical performance metrics for direct detection data links. This was the full scope of parameters available about the laser. Given the fact that the number of known laser parameters was relatively small and the need to model the intensity noise accurately, DML was selected as the most optimal model in terms of trade-off between the input parameter complexity and model accuracy. The temperature dependent DML laser parameters were extracted by Analog Photonics engineers solely by fitting the model results to the LIV and RIN measurements at each temperature, without the need to know all the internal details of the proprietary laser device.
The comparison of the simulated and measured laser’s figures of merit is given in figure 5, showing a very good agreement.
The temperature dependence of the laser output power and the noise introduced by the laser can significantly affect the operation of photonic circuits. In this post we described the steps to create an optimal compact model for a proprietary laser device in Ansys Lumerical INTERCONNECT that takes the temperature effects and intensity noise accurately into account. This laser model is part of APSUNY Active Interposer (AI) Packaging PDK v.1.0.
For a more technically detailed version of this story and additional references, please check our related white paper.
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