Title :
Automated, self-aligned assembly of 12 fibers per nanophotonic chip with standard microelectronics assembly tooling
Author :
Barwicz, Tymon ; Boyer, Nicolas ; Harel, Stephane ; Lichoulas, Ted W. ; Kimbrell, Eddie L. ; Janta-Polczynski, Alexander ; Kamlapurkar, Swetha ; Engelmann, Sebastian ; Vlasov, Yurii A. ; Fortier, Paul
Author_Institution :
IBM T.J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
Abstract :
Silicon photonics technology aims to leverage microelectronic chip fabrication facilities to bring disruptive advancements in photonic circuits cost and complexity. However, the large scale deployment of silicon photonics is muted by the difficulty of cost-efficient and scalable, single-mode optical inputs and outputs. To disruptively improve on cost and scalability, we believe that the best approach is to enable existing high-throughput microelectronic packaging tools for single-mode photonic packaging. In this paper, we experimentally demonstrate such approach with automated assembly of standard-fiber arrays to photonic chips. We identify the main challenges and solutions to enabling high-throughput pick-and-place tooling for single-mode photonic assembly. These include challenges with fiber handling, placement accuracy and limitations in movement complexity. We present a manufacturability assessment of the employed fiber-to-chip self-alignment. We show through Monte Carlo tolerance analysis an expected manufacturing re-alignment accuracy of <;1.3 um despite initial misalignments of up to ~40 um. We believe the approach proposed and demonstrated here can substantially improve on single-mode optical input and output cost and scalability.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; elemental semiconductors; integrated circuit packaging; integrated optics; integrated optoelectronics; nanophotonics; optical fibre fabrication; silicon; Monte Carlo tolerance analysis; Si; automated self-aligned assembly; fiber handling; fiber-to-chip self-alignment; high-throughput pick-and-place tooling; manufacturability assessment; microelectronic chip fabrication; movement complexity; nanophotonic chip; photonic circuits complexity; photonic circuits cost; placement accuracy; scalability; silicon photonics technology; single-mode optical inputs; single-mode optical single-mode optical inputs; standard microelectronics assembly tooling; standard-fiber arrays; Assembly; Couplers; Optical fiber couplers; Optical fiber polarization;
Conference_Titel :
Electronic Components and Technology Conference (ECTC) , 2015 IEEE 65th
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
DOI :
10.1109/ECTC.2015.7159680