6 results match your criteria: "Ghent University--Interuniversity Microelectronics Center[Affiliation]"

Experimental demonstration of reservoir computing on a silicon photonics chip.

Nat Commun

March 2014

1] Department of Information Technology, Photonics Research Group, Ghent University-Interuniversity Microelectronics Center, Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, Gent 9000, Belgium [2] Center for Nano-and Biophotonics (NB-Photonics), Ghent University, Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, Gent 9000, Belgium.

In today's age, companies employ machine learning to extract information from large quantities of data. One of those techniques, reservoir computing (RC), is a decade old and has achieved state-of-the-art performance for processing sequential data. Dedicated hardware realizations of RC could enable speed gains and power savings.

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Parallel reservoir computing using optical amplifiers.

IEEE Trans Neural Netw

September 2011

Photonics Research Group, Department of Information Technology, Ghent University-Interuniversity Microelectronics Center, Ghent, Belgium.

Reservoir computing (RC), a computational paradigm inspired on neural systems, has become increasingly popular in recent years for solving a variety of complex recognition and classification problems. Thus far, most implementations have been software-based, limiting their speed and power efficiency. Integrated photonics offers the potential for a fast, power efficient and massively parallel hardware implementation.

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Optical phased arrays are versatile components enabling rapid and precise beam steering. An integrated approach is followed in which a 1D optical phased array is fabricated on silicon-on-insulator. The optical phased array consists of 16 parallel grating couplers spaced 2 mum apart.

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We report on the switching of an all-optical flip-flop consisting of a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) and a distributed feedback laser diode (DFB), bidirectionally coupled to each other. Both simulation and experimental results are presented. Switching times as low as 50ps, minimal required switch pulse energies below 1pJ and a repetition rate of 1.

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A polarization beam splitter (PBS) based on a giant-reflection to zero-order (GIRO) grating is presented. The GIRO grating is a simple binary diffraction grating with parameters chosen such that the excited optical modes in the grating interfere constructively and destructively at the respective interfaces. This interference results in high-zero-order reflection (>99%) with a high polarization-selective extinction ratio (+/-30 dB).

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We propose a concept for InGaAsP-InP 1.55-microm lasers integrated with spot-size converters based on modal interference between the modes of the structure formed by an active waveguide and an underlying fiber-matched antiresonant reflecting optical waveguide. Simulation results show that the spot-size converters exhibit low transformation loss, and narrowed far-field emission patterns (10 degrees x 20 degrees) and reduce the coupling loss to standard single-mode fibers from 8 to 2.

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