An electrically-driven Carbon nanotube-based plasmonic laser on Silicon (2305.09871v1)
Abstract: Photonic signal processing requires efficient on-chip light sources with higher modulation bandwidths. Todays conventional fastest semiconductor diode lasers exhibit modulation speeds only on the order of a few tens of GHz due to gain compression effects and parasitic electrical capacitances. Here we theoretically show an electrically-driven Carbon nanotube (CNT)-based laser utilizing strong light-matter-interaction via monolithic integration into Silicon photonic crystal nanobeam (PCNB) cavities. The laser is formed by single-walled CNTs inside a combo-cavity consisting of both a plasmonic metal-oxide-semiconductor hybrid mode embedded in the one dimensional PCNB cavity. The emission originates from interband recombinations of electrostatically-doped nanotubes depending on the tubes chirality towards matching the C-band. Our simulation results show that the laser operates at telecom frequencies resulting in a power output > 3 (100) uW and > 100 (1000)GHz modulation speed at 1x (10x) threshold. Such monolithic integration schemes provide an alternative promising approach for light source in future photonics integrated circuits.