- Yang, Ki Youl;
- Shirpurkar, Chinmay;
- White, Alexander D;
- Zang, Jizhao;
- Chang, Lin;
- Ashtiani, Farshid;
- Guidry, Melissa A;
- Lukin, Daniil M;
- Pericherla, Srinivas V;
- Yang, Joshua;
- Kwon, Hyounghan;
- Lu, Jesse;
- Ahn, Geun Ho;
- Van Gasse, Kasper;
- Jin, Yan;
- Yu, Su-Peng;
- Briles, Travis C;
- Stone, Jordan R;
- Carlson, David R;
- Song, Hao;
- Zou, Kaiheng;
- Zhou, Huibin;
- Pang, Kai;
- Hao, Han;
- Trask, Lawrence;
- Li, Mingxiao;
- Netherton, Andy;
- Rechtman, Lior;
- Stone, Jeffery S;
- Skarda, Jinhee L;
- Su, Logan;
- Vercruysse, Dries;
- MacLean, Jean-Philippe W;
- Aghaeimeibodi, Shahriar;
- Li, Ming-Jun;
- Miller, David AB;
- Marom, Dan M;
- Willner, Alan E;
- Bowers, John E;
- Papp, Scott B;
- Delfyett, Peter J;
- Aflatouni, Firooz;
- Vučković, Jelena
The use of optical interconnects has burgeoned as a promising technology that can address the limits of data transfer for future high-performance silicon chips. Recent pushes to enhance optical communication have focused on developing wavelength-division multiplexing technology, and new dimensions of data transfer will be paramount to fulfill the ever-growing need for speed. Here we demonstrate an integrated multi-dimensional communication scheme that combines wavelength- and mode- multiplexing on a silicon photonic circuit. Using foundry-compatible photonic inverse design and spectrally flattened microcombs, we demonstrate a 1.12-Tb/s natively error-free data transmission throughout a silicon nanophotonic waveguide. Furthermore, we implement inverse-designed surface-normal couplers to enable multimode optical transmission between separate silicon chips throughout a multimode-matched fibre. All the inverse-designed devices comply with the process design rules for standard silicon photonic foundries. Our approach is inherently scalable to a multiplicative enhancement over the state of the art silicon photonic transmitters.