Quantum Dot Lasers Boost Isolator-Free Photonic Circuits with Superior Feedback Tolerance

March 9, 2026
Quantum Dot Lasers Boost Isolator-Free Photonic Circuits with Superior Feedback Tolerance
  • In isolator-free photonic integrated circuits, quantum dot lasers show superior feedback tolerance when benchmarked against quantum well, quantum wire, and VCSEL platforms.

  • The work provides practical design rules for isolator-free integration, potentially reducing packaging complexity, manufacturing challenges, and system costs across communications, sensing, LiDAR, and large-scale photonic systems.

  • Theoretical modeling based on Lang–Kobayashi analysis suggests the coherence collapse boundary shifts toward 0 dB in centimeter-scale PIC cavities, increasing tolerance under practical conditions.

  • The study demonstrates stable telecom-grade performance near the coherence collapse boundary, maintaining 10 Gbps external modulation and operation across a wide temperature range from 15 to 45 degrees Celsius.

  • Experimentally, coherence collapse was observed in a quantum dot laser at −6.7 dB, marking the first measurement of this threshold for the quantum dot platform.

  • By clarifying the true feedback limit of quantum dot lasers in realistic PIC environments, the findings address a major obstacle to scalable, energy-efficient optical systems.

  • The platform employs optimized quantum dot epitaxial growth and a semiconductor optical amplifier to compensate for signal loss, enabling robust operation under realistic feedback.

  • Led by Prof. Yating Wan at KAUST in collaboration with UC Santa Barbara, the research defines the feedback limits of quantum dot lasers to enable isolator-free photonic integrated circuits.

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Researchers Define Feedback Limits Of Quantum Dot Lasers

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