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arxiv 2506.06150 v1 pith:7QIBOYTV submitted 2025-06-06 physics.optics eess.SP

Inverse-designed nanophotonic neural network accelerators for ultra-compact optical computing

classification physics.optics eess.SP
keywords opticalcomputinginverse-designednanophotonicphotonicplatformultra-compactaccelerators
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Inverse-designed nanophotonic devices offer promising solutions for analog optical computation. High-density photonic integration is critical for scaling such architectures toward more complex computational tasks and large-scale applications. Here, we present an inverse-designed photonic neural network (PNN) accelerator on a high-index contrast material platform, enabling ultra-compact and energy-efficient optical computing. Our approach introduces a wave-based inverse-design method based on three dimensional finite-difference time-domain (3D-FDTD) simulations, exploiting the linearity of Maxwell's equations to reconstruct arbitrary spatial fields through optical coherence. By decoupling the forward-pass process into linearly separable simulations, our approach is highly amenable to computational parallelism, making it particularly well suited for acceleration using graphics processing units (GPUs) and other parallel computing platforms, thereby enhancing scalability across large problem domains. We fabricate and experimentally validate two inverse-designed PNN accelerators on the silicon-on-insulator platform, achieving on-chip MNIST and MedNIST classification accuracies of 89% and 90% respectively, within ultra-compact footprints of just 20 $\times$ 20 $\mu$m$^{2}$ and 30 $\times$ 20 $\mu$m$^{2}$. Our results establish a scalable and energy-efficient platform for analog photonic computing, effectively bridging inverse nanophotonic design with high-performance optical information processing.

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