Silicon Photonics Inspection & Testing for AI Data Center Scaling

Silicon photonics is moving from design lab to fab floor. As AI infrastructure scales toward multi-terabit optical interconnects, foundries and SiPh manufacturers face a new challenge: sustaining device performance and yield not at prototype volumes, but across full wafer runs. That requires inspection and testing built for production — not adapted from it.

Challenges in Silicon Photonics Testing & Inspection

Silicon photonic devices must maintain tight optical performance across densely integrated structures, where nanometer-scale variations translate directly into insertion loss, coupling inefficiency, and bandwidth penalties. Ensuring yield and scalability requires wafer-level visibility into both structural and optically active defects.

silicon

Wafer-Scale Yield Without Throughput Compromise

Functional testing of PIC devices at wafer scale has historically required active fiber alignment — slow, iterative, and incompatible with production line economics. As SiPh foundries scale output, the testing step becomes a throughput bottleneck unless it is fully automated and passively aligned.

Root Cause Visibility Across the Process Window

When yield drops, identifying whether the source is a lithography deviation, etch non-uniformity, or coupling misalignment requires more than pass/fail data. Without in-circuit optical visibility, process engineers are left reverse-engineering failures from output measurements — extending debug cycles and delaying corrective action.

Advanced Packaging Escapes Are Costly

Silicon photonic wafers are increasingly integrated into co-packaged optics, optical engines, and chiplet-based architectures. Optical defects or yield outliers that escape wafer-level testing propagate into packaged modules where rework is expensive or impossible. Pre-bond inspection is the last low-cost intervention point.

Why It Matters

Yield in silicon photonics is not a binary problem. Devices that pass basic continuity tests can still carry optical loss, coupling inefficiency, or wavelength instability that degrades system performance after integration. Catching these at wafer level — before dicing, before packaging, before shipment — is the difference between profitable ramp and costly rework.

As SiPh transitions to foundry-scale production, the economics of inspection shift too. The cost of a missed defect compounds with every downstream step. Wafer-level testing that combines throughput with real optical insight is no longer a process engineering nicety — it is a yield management requirement.

Technical Specifications

The table below outlines representative performance targets used to illustrate inspection challenges; actual requirements vary by application and system design.

ParameterExample RequirementHow InZiv Addresses It
Wafer formats200mm, 300mm production wafersGlide-SiPh PIC supports full-wafer automated stepping across both formats; FOUP compatible
Device TypesEdge-coupled and grating-coupled PICsPatented deep-trench FAU and angled probe configurations handle both architectures
Coupling speed & efficiencySeconds per device, no active alignmentPassive alignment technology — no hexapod, no iterative tuning, no recalibration between wafer
Test coverageInsertion loss, pass/fail, yield mappingMulti-channel optical and electrical characterization
Failure analysisIn-circuit optical loss localizationOmni-SiPh LightView maps propagation inside the PIC — not inferred from port measurements
Probe accessBuried and deep-trench structuresCustom deep-trench probes reaching down to 30µm in width trenches, and large Z-scan range
microled wafer testing

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We would be happy to schedule a confidential call to discuss your specific needs and answer your questions. We can also provide a confidential demonstration of InZiv’s testing and inspection technology on your sample.

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