This disclosure relates to a resonator configuration for distributed feedback laser applications.
Interest in band-gap engineering has intensified in recent years due in part to advances in nanofabrication that enable nanostructured materials with unprecedented electromagnetic, electronic, and photonic properties. Such materials hold promise for transformative impact in fields such as integrated optics, photonic crystals, metamaterials, plasmonics, electronics, and more generally topological electronics and photonics. Many such applications exploit Bragg band gaps that are well known to exist in structures with periodic material properties.
The heart of a distributed feedback (“DFB”) laser is a corrugated light-guiding layer usually referred to as a “grating” or “distributed feedback mirror.” The imposed grating periodicity blocks propagation of light with a specific wavelength (λ) equal to twice the period (a) of the grating. The relation is known as Bragg's law, and the corresponding mirror is known as a Bragg mirror (
For amplification, a wave should be blocked inside the mirror. The wavelength of the blocked wave is determined by a period of the grating. Accordingly, by its nature, a DFB laser or similar with Bragg mirrors can emit light with a specific wavelength given by λ=2a. Therefore, widely used DFB semiconductor lasers or any others with a Bragg mirror are known as single frequency, single wavelength, or, more generally, single mode lasers. These lasers can emit red, blue, or green light, or other colors, for example, 1550 nm wavelength light used for transmissions through fiber optic communication cable.
To date engineers and researchers have not been able to design a cavity capable of simultaneously confining light of different colors or, in other words, confining a rainbow in a cavity. The availability of such cavity would open doors for designing a white color mirror and white laser that amplifies a rainbow in one cavity. Semiconductor white-light sources are in great demand because of their potential large economic benefits. Accordingly, there is a critical, long-felt need for a white light laser.
In an embodiment of the present disclosure, a conventional DFB grating (Bragg mirror) is replaced with specifically-designed dielectric slab (hereinafter called a “Bloch mirror”). This Bloch mirror dielectric slab resonator expands the operating wavelength of a conventional laser Bragg mirror resonator from a single wavelength to a multicolor wavelength range. The disclosed periodic structure of the Bloch mirror slab confines and amplifies light propagation in a wide range of wavelengths simultaneously. This allows for amplification of multiple components (i.e., “rainbow components”) of white light. The Bloch mirror may be made of a high-refractive-index material like, for example, GaN (n=2.5) with periodic first and second boundaries, which are aligned (in phase) in contrast to widely used configurations where periodic profiles are out of alignment having relative phase shift of 180 degrees. The slab may be transparent for light. An amplitude of thickness modulation ξ varies between 10% and 30% of the average thickness of a layer d, and wherein
(p and m are indices of waveguide modes and p>m; p=1, 2, 3, . . . ; m=1, 2, 3, . . . ). For example, in a particular embodiment where the waveguide modes are p=2 and m=1, then d=a√{square root over (3)}/2 and d is constant over the length of the mirror (the x-axis in
White light lasers could have broad application in fields such as:
In an aspect, a resonator is provided. The resonator includes a waveguide having a first boundary, a second boundary parallel to the first boundary, a first end, a second end, and a waveguide cavity at least partly between the first boundary and the second boundary. The waveguide may be an optical waveguide. The waveguide may comprise a dielectric material. For example, the waveguide may comprise gallium nitride (GaN).
A first grating is at the first boundary of the waveguide. The first grating has a period of distance a. A second grating is at the second boundary of the waveguide. The second grating has a period of distance a. The first boundary may have a periodic profile aligned with a periodic profile of the second boundary. The periodic profile of the first boundary and the second boundary may be a sinusoidal profile, a square profile, or profile of another shape. The thickness of the periodic profile of the first boundary and the second boundary (i.e., a profile of the first grating and the second grating) may be between 10% and 30% (inclusive) of the distance d. A first phase of the first grating may be substantially aligned with a second phase of the second grating. The first grating and/or the second grating may be formed using one or more transducers, such as, for example, acousto-optic, electro-optic, or piezoelectric transducers. The first grating and the second grating may be acoustic waves.
A distance d between the first boundary and the second boundary is constant. Distance d may be equal to
where p and m are mode indices in the waveguide and p>m. For example, in an embodiment where the waveguide mode indices are p=2 and m=1, the distance d between the first boundary and the second boundary is equal to a√{square root over (3)}/2. The resonator comprises an active layer for light generation.
The present disclosure may be embodied as a distributed feedback laser comprising a resonator of an embodiment disclosed herein.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the disclosure, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
In one aspect of the present disclosure, a resonator for a distributed feedback (DFB) is provided which is suitable to replace a conventional DFB laser grating (mirror).
With reference to
where p and m are indices of the waveguide mode and p>m (further described below under the heading “Further Discussion”). In a particular example, where p=2 and m=1, then d=a√{square root over (3)}/2.
Each of the first grating and the second grating may have a profile which has periodic modulation (a “periodic profile”). The profile may be sinusoidal, square, or other profiles (see, for example,
In a particular embodiment, where the resonator is suitable for use in a distributed feedback laser, the waveguide is an optical waveguide. The optical waveguide may be made from a high-refractive-index material, such as, for example, GaN (n=2.5). Using the axis orientation of the figures for convenience (but not intended to be limiting), the waveguide may be transparent to light along the x-axis.
The relationship between the thickness d and period a of the mirror may be given by the following formula:
Where d and a are the thickness and period of the layer, p and m are mode indices (i.e., integer numbers 1, 2, 3 . . . ) where p>m, and λ0 and λ1 are wavelengths of light for different modes, n is the refractive index of a dielectric (e.g., n=2.5 for GaN).
Further Discussion
Considering materials with uniform properties and periodic boundary profiles, Bloch resonance (BR) and band-gap phenomena are described herein. Bloch resonance and band-gap phenomena are distinct from Bragg phenomena. Specifically, Bloch resonances arise from transverse phase matching (TPM), whereas Bragg resonances are due to longitudinal phase matching (LPM). Moreover, Bloch gaps can be engineered over the entire first Brillouin zone up to an infinite wavelength, i.e., kx=0, while Bragg gaps open at a fixed wavelength, twice the period of the structure. Wave phenomena for small kx˜0 are especially interesting for novel photonic and electronic applications and a Bloch gap at kx=0 for the electromagnetic (EM) field at GHz frequencies is demonstrated herein. This theory broadly applies to wave phenomena from the quantum to the continuum scale with applications in the fields of solid-state physics, acoustics, photonics, electronics, and lasers, among others.
A theory of Bloch resonances and gaps is developed herein, and the theory was verified experimentally for the EM field at GHz frequencies. For the experiment, a hollow waveguide with reconfigurable metallic boundary plates was used as shown in
A traditional method for analyzing wave phenomena in periodic structures is coupled-mode theory, which is well developed and used for applications in integrated optics, solid state electronics, and microwaves. However, most of this work has focused on the coupling of longitudinal waves, for example, longitudinal phase matching (“LPM”). LPM has been expressed as modified Bragg's law, which follows from an analysis of the field represented as a superposition of waveguide modes. However, this prior analysis rarely addresses the transverse wave components, which are emphasized here.
A theory of Bloch resonances and gaps is disclosed herein that takes into account the coupling between traveling and standing waves and provides a complete description of wave propagation. The present analysis is based on the field solution as a superposition of eigenstates that include both longitudinal and transverse wave components. The inclusion of transverse components, which have previously been neglected in more traditional mode expansion approximation, leads to new results—Bloch wave phenomena—and is an advantage of the present disclosure. Specifically, the present analysis shows that a Bloch gap occurs when the cutoff frequencies of two transverse orthogonal eigenmodes coincide. In this case, the two independent states are degenerate, which results in the splitting of the degenerate cutoff frequency into two distinct frequencies that are separated by a forbidden gap in the transmission spectrum—referred to herein as the Bloch gap. Analytical expressions are derived that predict Bloch resonances and gaps when the amplitude of the periodic boundary profile is small. This was validated experimentally and provides a fundamental understanding of wave propagation, including Bragg and Bloch gaps, from a unified point of view.
In the experiment, a sinusoidal profile was defined for the boundaries, i.e., y(x)=ξ cos(qx), where q=2π/a and ξ and a are an amplitude and period of the profile, respectively. In the experiment depicted in
The boundary value problem (BVP) for the waveguide reduces to solving Equation (2a), for the z component of the field Ez(x,y) with appropriate boundary conditions (BCs). From the Bloch-Floquet theorem, Ez(x,y) can be represented as the Fourier series in Equation (2b), which is different than a superposition of modes:
where k0=ω/c is the wave vector magnitude and ky,n, kx are transverse and longitudinal components of k, respectively, and the relation between them, ky,n2=k02−(kx+nq)2, follows from Equations (2a) and (2b).
The solution, Equation (2b), is of the form of a Bloch wave Ez(x,y)=uk(x,y)ejk
These BCs were imposed and a system of linear algebraic equations was obtained for the coefficients an and bn. If the amplitude of the boundary profile is small, i.e., ξ/d<<1 and ξq<<1, then, in the first approximation, the equations reduce to six equations for coefficients a0, a±1, and b0, b±1 that correspond to the n=+1, 0, −1 harmonics. By equating the 6×6 determinant of the reduced system of linear equations set to 0, the following characteristic Equation (3) is obtained for the allowed eigenvalues ky,n. There are six corresponding eigenstates, into which the modes of a flat (ξ=0) waveguide break upon imposing a periodic boundary:
Note the invariance of Equation (3) with respect to the interchange of key parameters θ↔−θ, ky,+1↔ky,−1, and kx↔−kx, which reflects an underlying symmetry of the guided wave phenomena.
The solution of Equation (3) can be found by successive approximations using a small parameter ξ/d: i.e., ky,0=ky,0(0)+δky,0+ . . . , where the δky,0, etc., represent successive corrections to the solution. In the lowest 0th order approximation (i.e., ξ=0, a flat boundary), Equation (3) reduces to tan(ku,0d)=0, resulting in ky,0(0)(pπ)/d≡ky,0,p, for p=1, 2, 3, . . . . Here, ky,0,p and ω0,p=cky,0,p denote the pth modes and cutoff frequencies for the n=0 harmonic, respectfully.
Next, the resonance states, which occur when the denominators in Equation (3) vanish, are analyzed:
ky,±1d=mπ≡ky,±1,md, m=1,2, . . . , (4a)
where
ky,±1=√{square root over (ky,0,p±2kxq−q2)} (4b)
Equation (4a), which involves ky, is the condition of resonance, which is referred to herein as TPM. This is in contrast, and in addition, to LPM, which involves matching the kx component to q only. Equation (4b) follows from the relation ky,n2=k02−(kx+nq)2 with k02=ky,0,p2+kx2 taken in the 0th approximation. The behavior of the system becomes clear from an analysis of Eq. (4b), which indicates that there are two types of resonance caused by the kx and ky components, respectively.
The first type of resonance is associated with LPM and occurs when kx=±q/2, i.e., at the boundaries of the first Brillouin zone (BFBZ), which is the well-known Bragg's law. Substituting ky,±1,m (for ky,±1) into Equation (4b), it was found that at the BFBZ, ky,±1,m=ky,−1,m=ky,0,p, which implies that m=p for the resonant component. Thus, it was found that Bragg's law is a special case of TPM for m=p. Note that the resonances for ky,±1,m=ky,−1,m are the same because Equation (3) is invariant with respect to the interchange of these parameters (ky,+1,m⇔ky,−1,m).
The second type of resonance, which is defined herein as the Bloch resonance, occurs when ky,±1,md=mπ but kx≠q/2, i.e., not the Bragg case. As an example, for the m=1 resonances, corresponding spatial harmonics are labelled as ky,±1,1. The E field amplitude distribution for these transverse waves along the y-axis is shown in
To further elucidate the nature of the GBR, consider
In the asymmetric case, Δx=0 and d(x) is constant for all x. Thus, the wave does not undergo Bragg reflection. However, the waveguide possesses translational symmetry and the dispersion can be represented as the folded modes shown in
The GBR condition follows from Equations (3a) and (3b) at kx=0 and can be written in terms of wave numbers, geometric parameters, or wavelengths using Equations (5a)-(5c), respectively:
where λ0 and λ1 are wavelengths of the standing waves of the 0th and the first spatial harmonics, respectively. From Equation (5b), the GBR between the fundamental ky,0,1 and first harmonics ky,±1,1 (p=2, m=1) occurs at d=a√{square root over (3)}/2 or λ1,1=2λ0,2=2d. Both waves have uniform amplitudes along the x-axis, i.e., kx=0 (λx→∞), but periodic amplitude profiles along the y-axis as shown in
The GBR occurs in the asymmetric waveguide if the cutoff frequency of the first harmonics ky,±1,1 coincides with the cutoff frequency of the 0th harmonic of the second mode ky,0,2, as shown in
The degeneracy is a feature of Bloch resonance and is similar to what occurs in quantum mechanics based on degenerate perturbation theory. More specifically, the degenerate energy level splits into two levels. In the present case, a similar splitting was obtained from the solution of Eq. (3) in the second order of approximation for ky,0. In this case, the degenerate frequency level splits into two frequencies f0,2+ and f0,2− with a forbidden gap δf between them:
where f0,2 is the cutoff frequency of the second mode (ky,0,2) of the 0th harmonic in a flat waveguide. Here, f0,2+ is upward shifted with respect to f0,2, while f0,2− is downward shifted and corresponds to the cutoff frequency of the first harmonic (ky,1,1). This is relabeled as f0,2−≡f1,1+ for emphasis. The amplitude distributions for both waves are shown in
The GBR results in a unique waveguide spectrum; the first mode (p=1) has two cutoff frequencies: lower f0,1 and upper f1,1+. The dispersion in
GBR was investigated for the experimental setup (
Equations (4a) and (4b) show that the Bloch gap can be engineered at any kx over the entire first Brillouin zone, i.e., from kx=0 to kx=±q/2, by varying the height d of the waveguide or the period a. The wave vector kx,gap at which the Bloch gap occurs in a hollow waveguide is given by:
The disclosure was validated using the experiment of
The GBR occurs at Δx=0 and causes the opening of a 3.2 GHz Bloch gap (between 9.6 and 12.8 GHz) centered at 11.2 GHz. The dispersion ω(k) for Δx=0 is shown in
Analogizing the experimental results (using microwaves) to light, if the experimental microwave structure is scaled down to the order of wavelengths of light, then the Bloch mirror would easily confine multiple light components ranging from 650 nm (red) and 475 nm (blue) or even beyond this range.
Bragg gaps in uniform microfibers with periodic boundary profiles have already found commercial use as strain and temperature sensors. The Bloch phenomena also apply to a periodic medium with a flat boundary, in which case the periodic variation of ky is due to the periodicity of the refractive index of the medium.
Bloch resonances and gaps can be tuned by reconfiguring the boundaries and transformative nanoscale implementations could be achieved using acousto-optic, electro-optic, or piezoelectric transducers. For example, an integrated optic equivalent of the microwave setup shown in
Another potential application for a Bloch gap structure is a distributed feedback (DFB) laser. Replacing the periodic structure in a conventional DFB laser with a Bloch gap material with a wide band gap at kx=0 could open up opportunities for a white-light-DFB laser.
Another potential application is in the field of electronics. In this case, Schrödinger's equation describes the wave phenomena and the “operating wavelength” is the de Broglie wavelength of an electron in a quantum well. A suitable material for fabricating a periodic quantum well that can support a high mobility two-dimensional electron gas is an AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructure. For a typical electron concentration ns˜1011 cm−2, the de Broglie wavelength of an electron at the Fermi level λF is in the range of 80-100 nm depending on the electron concentration ns:λF=√{square root over (2π/ns)}. If the X-band microwave structure (
Although the present disclosure has been described with respect to one or more particular embodiments, it will be understood that other embodiments of the present disclosure may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/456,183, filed on Feb. 8, 2017, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/017375 | 2/8/2018 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2018/148375 | 8/16/2018 | WO | A |
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