Achieving compact on-chip pulsed lasers with attractive performance metrics
and compatibility with the silicon photonics platform is an important, yet
elusive, goal in contemporary nanophotonics. Here, the fundamental question of
whether 2D materials can be utilized as both gain and saturable absorption
media to enable compact integrated passively Q-switched nanophotonic lasers is
posed and addressed by examining a broad range of 2D material families. The
study is conducted by developing a temporal coupled-mode theory framework
involving semi-classical rate equations that is capable of rigorously handling
gain and saturable absorption by 2D materials, allowing to perform stability
and bifurcation analysis covering broad parameter spaces. The range of
pulse-train metrics (repetition rate, pulse width, peak power) that can be
obtained via different 2D materials is thoroughly assessed. Our work
illustrates that nanophotonic cavities enhanced with 2D materials can enable
passive Q-switching with repetition rates ranging up to 50~GHz, short pulse
duration down to few picoseconds, and peak power exceeding several milliwatts.
Such attractive metrics, along with the ultrathin nature of 2D materials and
the ability to electrically tune their properties, demonstrate the potential of
the proposed platform for compact and flexible integrated laser sources.