We propose a monolithically integrated optical frequency comb (OFC) generation platform on thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN), featuring cascaded dual-drive Mach–Zehnder modulators (DDMZM) and a Si3N4-assisted spot size converter (SSC). To capture microscopic mode mismatches and spatial phase accumulation often overlooked in idealized scalar simulations, we establish a multi-physics co-simulation framework integrating finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) analysis with macroscopic transmission modeling. Based on this framework, the cascaded modulator architecture generates 25 highly stable comb lines with a dense 2 GHz spacing and an envelope flatness within 2 dB. Tolerance analysis indicates that the comb generation is highly resilient to typical manufacturing and environmental variations, including thermal bias drift, RF phase mismatch, and half-wave voltage (Vπ) dispersion. Furthermore, physical-layer modeling shows that the integrated SSC reduces fiber-to-chip coupling loss to 0.55 dB per facet, preserving the necessary optical power budget. To validate the platform’s viability as a multi-wavelength continuous-wave source for spatial-division multiplexed (SDM) interconnects, a parallel transmission over a 20 km standard single-mode fiber is modeled. Using a digital signal processing (DSP)-free 10 Gb/s non-return-to-zero (NRZ) scheme, the 25-channel system maintains a worst-case bit error rate strictly below the forward error correction (FEC) threshold. This work offers a practical, physics-based evaluation framework for high-density co-packaged optics (CPO).
Wang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.