Microwave oscillator and frequency comb in a silicon optomechanical cavity with a full phononic bandgap

Publication date

2021-06-13T09:49:34Z

2021-06-13T09:49:34Z

2020-07-31

2021-06-13T09:49:34Z

Abstract

Cavity optomechanics has recently emerged as a new paradigm enabling the manipulation of mechanical motion via optical fields tightly confined in deformable cavities. When driving an optomechanical (OM) crystal cavity with a laser blue-detuned with respect to the optical resonance, the mechanical motion is amplified, ultimately resulting in phonon lasing at MHz and even GHz frequencies. In this work, we show that a silicon OM crystal cavity performs as an OM microwave oscillator when pumped above the threshold for self-sustained OM oscillations. To this end, we use an OM cavity designed to have a breathing-like mechanical mode at 3.897 GHz in a full phononic bandgap. Our measurements show that the first harmonic of the detected signal displays a phase noise of ≈−100 dBc/Hz at 100 kHz. Stronger blue-detuned driving leads eventually to the formation of an OM frequency comb, whose lines are spaced by the mechanical frequency. We also measure the phase noise for higher-order harmonics and show that, unlike in Brillouin oscillators, the noise is increased as corresponding to classical harmonic mixing. Finally, we present real-time measurements of the comb waveform and show that it can be fitted to a theoretical model recently presented. Our results suggest that silicon OM cavities could be relevant processing elements in microwave photonics and optical RF processing, in particular in disciplines requiring low weight, compactness and fiber interconnection.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

De Gruyter

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2020-0148

Nanophotonics, 2020, vol. 9, num. 11, p. 3535-3544

https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2020-0148

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/713450/EU//PHENOMEN

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Rights

cc-by (c) Mercadé, Laura et al., 2020

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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