Integrated photonics is maturing and integration density increases. This means the design methods and testing strategies need to keep up. Are you interested in exploring compact models and novel characterization techniques? Join our multidisciplinary team and help us unlocking this new era of photonic integrated circuits.
InformationAs a PhD student in our group, you will be responsible for setting up new compact models. Compact models are the optimum trade-off between the required physical functionality and computation intensity. As such, they enable the simulation of advanced and high-integration-density photonic integrated circuits. (PICs). Specifically, we will be looking at optical amplifiers, lasers and photodetectors, with a focus on noise and high-power behavior. Such compact models will propel the field of PICs into applications beyond communications, e.g., in fiber sensing, metrology and microwave photonics.
Since such models need to be qualified for PIC foundry platforms, you will also be responsible for setting up and evaluating new optical test and characterization techniques. The goal is to be able to measure all the parameters in the compact model in a wafer-scale approach and in a robust way. You will first work in our optical characterization lab, but then transfer these techniques to automated wafer testing tools.
So, where is the scientific challenge in all this? The field of PICs is rapidly evolving, along similar lines as electronics did a few decades ago. We are entering a new era, that is currently not well explored, and we need you to set the new standards of working, and to develop new design concepts. It’s an open field, with lots of opportunities for a creative researcher, who can keep an eye on the bigger picture.
You will be working in close collaboration with the
Photonic Integration Technology Center and the foundry, design and test partners in the
Pix Europe consortium and in our
JePPIX network. Since Eindhoven is located in the heart of the leading semiconductor and photonics ecosystem “
Brainport”, close collaboration with a wider range of academic and industrial partners can also be anticipated.
As a PhD student, you will be part of a dynamic and ambitious environment, with plenty of opportunities to develop yourself. Our newly established
Casimir Institute - Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) consists of many closely-cooperating research groups, focusing on integrated photonics, semiconductor technology and quantum technology. You will be part of the Photonic Integration group (PhI) at Electrical Engineering, which has about 70 members, 25 of which are PhD students. Our laboratory facilities are extensive and state of the art.