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H. V.
Demir, F. H. Koklu, M. B. Yairi, J. S. Harris, and D. A. B. Miller,
"Optoelectronic switches based on diffusive conduction," J. Appl. Phys.
100 Art. No. 043107 (2006) We
study the process of diffusive conduction that we use in our
optoelectronic switches to achieve rapid optical switching (on a
picosecond time scale). We present the characteristic Green's function
of the diffusive conduction derived for arbitrary initial conditions. We
also report the series solutions of the diffusive conduction obtained
for different boundary conditions (V=0 and del V=0 along the device
contact lines) in different device geometries (rectangular and circular
mesas). Using these analytical results, we investigate the effect of
boundary conditions on the switching operation and the steady state
behavior in optical links. We demonstrate the feasibility of using such
diffusive conductive optoelectronic switches to establish optical links
in return-to-zero and non-return-to-zero coding schemes. For
multichannel optical switching, we discuss possible use of a single
optoelectronic switch to accommodate multiple channels at once, with >
100 optical channels (with a 2000 mm(-2) channel density and < 10%
cross-talk), predicted on a 300x300 mu m(2) mesa with a device switching
bandwidth of > 50 GHz, leading to a 5 Tb/s aggregate transmission in
principle. This approach of using multiple parallel channels on a single
switch is completely opposite to the traditional idea of arraying many
switches. This proposed scheme eliminates the need for on-chip switch
integration and the need for the alignment of the optical channels to
the integrated individual switches.
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