▎ 摘 要
Recently, the nonlinear optical response of graphene has been widely investigated, as has the integration of this 2D material onto dielectric waveguides so as to enhance the various nonlinear phenomena that underpin all-optical signal processing applications at telecom wavelengths. However, a great disparity continues to exist from these experimental reports, depending on the used conditions or the hybrid devices under test. Most importantly, hybrid graphene-based waveguides were tested under relatively low powers, and/or combined with waveguide materials that already exhibited a nonnegligible nonlinear contribution, thereby limiting the practical use of graphene for nonlinear applications. Here, we experimentally investigate the nonlinear response of Si3N4 waveguides that are locally covered by submillimeter-long graphene patches by means of pulsed degenerate four-wave mixing at telecom wavelength under 7 W peak powers. Our measurements and comparison with simulations allow us to estimate a local change of the nonlinearity sign as well as a moderate increase of the nonlinear waveguide parameter (gamma similar to -10 m(-1)W(-1)) provided by graphene. Our analysis also clarifies the tradeoff associated with the loss penalty and nonlinear benefit afforded by graphene patches integrated onto passive photonic circuits, thereby providing some guidelines for the design of hybrid integrated nonlinear devices, coated with graphene, or, more generally, any other 2D material.