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AngelTech Virtual 2 – the sequel proves a hit success

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Over 1700 delegates had the opportunity to watch, listen and learn as a host of industry luminaries provided some great insight into the latest developments in the compound semiconductor and specialised photonic integrated circuit technology sectors.

Angel Business Communications CEO and Event Organiser, Sukhi Bhadal, was delighted with the second AngelTech event, as it brought together the research, vendor and end user communities for some valuable education and networking opportunities.

“Following on from the continued disruption the COVID-19 pandemic has caused to the events industry, we were disappointed when we had to twice postpone physical Brussels event in March and then again in November. We have been delighted with the continued support the compound semiconductor and photonic integrated circuits community has given us. The 2nd AngelTech event was a fantastic success with over 1700 delegates registered, 25 sponsors signed up and some inspirational speakers. The event was held on our own virtual event platform ‘Connect’ and it allowed us to keep the community connected, learning and developing business.”

There is a significant overlap between the PIC and the compound semiconductor industry. Some photonic circuits are formed from InP, while others, such as those made from silicon or polymers, depend on III-Vs for the light source. Due to this close working relationship, the CS and PIC summits kicked off with a shared session that included some of the ways that III-Vs play a role in photonic circuits.

One talk by Geza Kurczwell from Hewlett Packard Enterprise focused on this theme, outlining how quantum dots could aid internal communication in supercomputers, while presentations from analysts at Yole Développement and Strategy Analytics detailed the promising outlook for the PIC industry, which has opportunities in many sectors.




CS International

This year the compound semiconductor industry has grabbed the headlines in the mainstream press for the role UV LEDs can play in combatting the Covid-19 epidemic. Detailing this opportunity, along with others, Jennifer Pagan from Aquisense Technologies described how UV LEDs can assist healthcare. While the performance of this device lags behind its light-emitting cousin, Haiding Sun from the University of Science & Technology China outlined several architectures that could help it to catch up.

Advances in visible LEDs continue. The green gap thwarts this sector, but it could be overcome by switching to the cubic form of GaN, argued David Wallis from Kubos Semiconductors. Despite difficulties in making green LEDs, the performance of all forms of visible LED continues to increase, and they are now capable of providing the light source in colour projectors for homes and offices, according to Benjamin Schulz from Osram Opto Semiconductors. Another lucrative opportunity for the LED lies in displays, where arrays of tiny chips provide direct emission. Transferring vast numbers of miniature LED chips onto a backplane is time-consuming, even with massive parallel transfer techniques, but microfluidics offers a promising alternative, revealed Paul Schuele from eLux Display.

As well as advancing devices made from established material systems, the AngelTech Online Summit considered the potential of new materials. One is AlScN, offering an opportunity for enhancing the channel in GaN-based HEMTs, claimed Stefano Leone from Fraunhofer IAF; and another is gallium oxide, capable or record-breaking field strengths, explained Andrew Green from the US Air Force Research Laboratory.




PIC International

Reflecting on the success of the PIC Virtual II part of AngelTech, Conference Chair, Dr Michael Lebby, comments: "The 2nd PIC Virtual Conference brought together a world class line up of speakers and discussion between attendees and those speakers. Virtual conferences have grown in popularity in 2020, and with our pre-recorded presentations, and live Q&A, issues, challenges, observations, comments were discussed and debated in a lively fashion. This brought a level of excitement to the conference and created an atmosphere where PIC technologies could be reviewed more thoroughly.”
The PIC Virtual II had talks and speakers that represented the whole value chain from wafers to epitaxial growth, devices, packaging, modules, systems, and social media companies that represent hyperscale datacenters and huge volume opportunities for PICs.
The first session, combined with Compound Semiconductor Virtual II looked at the opportunities for PICs in the supply chain, as well as the challenges that would be seen in the near future by one of the biggest photonics trade associations globally, EPIC. Quantum dot lasers, an exciting innovation for the technology were explored for applications in supercomputers and machines in general that require heavy computational processing. The session finished with market perspectives for photonics and specifically integrated photonics with silicon. While photonic integrated circuits essentially puts together many photonic components, there is now a need to fully integrate both electronics and photonics on the same platform.
This year, there were over 1700 delegates attending the one day of sessions on photonic integrated circuits (PICs) that focused not only on innovative technology, but how PICs could alleviate major headaches that optical networks, datacentres, telecommunications systems, automotive, computational processing, that we see today. Many talks focused on how PICs could be implemented into novel and innovative applications to move the industry forward, and keep the industry moving forward.


In 2020 with the rise of working from home, one of the biggest drivers for PICs are fiber-optic communications for datacentre interconnects. Facebook conveyed huge opportunities for innovative solutions for their datacentres that addressed high speed, low power consumption, innovative packaging (via co-packaged solutions), and cost effectiveness. Facebook’s drive was reliability, and showed that modulated signals have alleviated issues of early failures from individual lasers. Facebook also conveyed that high speed and low power are critical metrics for their architecture in datacentres.
There were also talks that explored PIC based technologies outside of fiber-optics, and those areas included bio, medical, sensing, and LIDAR for automotive applications. One of the most promising segments for PICs is silicon photonics, and this platform has matured quickly over the past few years. Silicon photonics is now utilizing hybrid solutions to improve performance on their integrated platform. At the conference we heard from a number of exciting technologies that could enable silicon photonics to be even more value to end-users. These technologies included: polymer modulators, high pockel’s effect materials for modulators, neuromorphic computing architectures, and a highly topical subject: co-packaging or CPO (co-packaging optics).



The conference discussed in detail other incumbent PIC technologies such as InP and GaAs, and the implicit message was that hybrid PICs would be an important vehicle for the next decade. This was confirmed by the presentation of industry roadmaps by Lightwave Logic. Two industry photonics roadmaps were presented, the first from 2016 which predicted technology and performance trends for a decade. This roadmap was reviewed in 2020, and the roadmap showed good accuracy in the predictions made. A new 2020 industry photonics roadmap was shown and areas of integrated photonics importance over the next decade. 2023 and 2024 were called out as the roadmap predictions showed fiber-optic transceivers moving from 800Gbps quickly towards 1600Gbps and cost performance metrics achieving less than $2/Gbps for photonics components and transceivers. Industry roadmaps are not new, the silicon industry has been using them for decades; and the good news is that these living documents are now being generated by the photonics industry to point towards challenges, opportunities, goals and areas where new technologies such as polymers, dielectric materials, silicon photonics, co-packaging solutions etc., can be planned and executed in a timely manner for their respective markets.


All presentations showed a number of improvements in the technology over the past 12 months. PIC markets are growing strongly to 10s of $B over the next decade, as well as the scalability of PIC technological platforms. The rise of the hybrid PIC, the co-packaged platform, and shared foundries showed that customers and end-users are now more open than ever to find the right PIC solution for their particular portfolio.
Michael adds: “A focused, well attended, with high technical content conference such as PIC International Virtual II surpassed all expectations in 2020, and is expected to be better, larger, more innovative in 2021. PIC Virtual has quickly become the conference to attend for the latest and greatest news and results in photonic integrated circuits globally. I look forward to the next event in 2021 for even more exciting updates and innovations by the industry.”
Looking to the future, Sukhi Bhadal is confident that the combination of the new virtual event platform, alongside the much anticipated return of the physical event (with the recent, positive vaccine news providing grounds for optimism), will ensure that AngelTech only continues to enhance its reputation as the number one conference and exhibition in the semiconductor industry.


He concludes:
COVID-19 continues to play havoc with industry events, however with the expertise and agility the AngelTech team have shown, we are sure we can still find novel ways for our community to stay connected and partners to find new potential customers. Going forward, we can’t wait to put together a portfolio of our flagship event in Brussels supplemented by virtual events to give year round exposure. That being said, like us all I can imagine, I can’t wait to be sipping on a pint of Belgium’s finest beer, after the first day of a hectic AngelTech event and once again enjoying the face to face networking we experience in Brussels. Roll on 2021!


The platform remains live on-demand for the next 3 months, where you can network with the community, reach out to the exhibitors and watch all presentations.
You can register for access to the portal or sign in here: https://virtual.angel.events/932-858-004/auth


EMCORE announces integration of PICs into its products
Scottish photonics consortium wins £4.7m in UKRI funding
Yuanjie Semiconductor to supply lasers to POET
Fraunhofer IPMS announces government funding for quantum photonic chip
POET Technologies partners with Yuanjie Semiconductor Technology
SiLC announces silicon photonics systems for machine vision
Scientists develop novel optical modulators for integrated photonics
Scientists report integrated photodiodes on TFLN
Coherent wins award for innovative photonics product
FBH to present quantum technology developments at EQTC 2023
Skorpios and FormericaOE demonstrate PICs in 800G optical transceivers
EFFECT Photonics verifies fully integrated InP PIC
NASA awards grant for silicon photonics project
OpenLight and Spark Photonics partner on PIC design services
DustPhotonics announces 800G chip for hyperscale data centres and AI
Lightwave Logic Receives Industry Innovation Award
Imec announces SiGe BiCMOS optical receiver
SiFotonics announces silicon photonics 800G LPO solutions
Rockley Photonics progresses noninvasive biomarker monitoring
MantiSpectra secures €4 million for miniaturised spectrometers
Sivers to demo next-gen laser arrays at ECOC 2023
ASMPT AMICRA and Teramount collaborate on silicon photonics packaging
Quantum Computing Inc. selects Arizona site for photonic chip foundry
German government to fund ams OSRAM optoelectronic semiconductor development
Luceda Photonics introduces new PIC design software
Vodafone explores silicon photonics for future mobile networks
Coherent introduces 1200 mW pump laser module
Photonics startups invited to apply to Luminate NY accelerator
New tool could improve lithography for smaller, faster chips
InP-based lasers surpass 2.2 mm
Indie Semiconductor buys Exalos AG
New technique controls direction and wavelength of emitted heat

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