Optical gratings are well known in the art and are used to disperse optical spectra spatially. Such gratings are commonly used in optical spectrometers to analyze the spectral composition of an optical beam. There is always a tradeoff between the length of an optical spectrometer and its resolution. Thus, if a higher wavelength resolution is required, the length required is also longer. Consider an example of a typical 1-meter long grating spectrometer in the market, which has a typical wavelength resolution of about ΔλSM=0.1 nm at a center operating wavelength λSM=1000 nm or ΔλSM/λSM=10−4. The dimensionless quantity for the length of the spectrometer LSM is LSM/λSM and LSM/λSM=106 in this example. The dimensionless product of the relative resolution ΔλSM/λSM and the relative physical size LSM/λSM of the spectrometer is dependent on the design of the spectrometer.
Resolution Vs Size/Area Factor
More precisely, consider a curved grating spectrometer device 1000 shown in
RSSM=(ΔλSM/λSM)*[(WSM/λSM)*(LSM/λSM)]0.5, (1)
where “*” denotes numerical multiplication. This factor (RSSM) is referred to here as the “resolution vs size” factor of the spectrometer. The square of RSSM factor is called “resolution vs area” factor:
RASM=(RSSM)2. (2)
The factors RASM and RSSM basically measure the compactness of a spectrometer for a given spectral resolution power. In this example, if WSM=LSM=1 m, then RSSM=100 and RASM=104. The smaller the RSSM and RASM value, the more compact is the spectrometer.
Only a few conventional spectrometers have RASM factor less than about 100 (or RSSM<10). This is primarily because of the various limitations in the prior arts (as will be described below). In many photonic integrated circuit, electronic-photonic integrated circuit, and fiber-optic applications, RASM factors of smaller than about RASM=1 down to RASM=0.01 are desirable. These cannot be achieved via the methods in the prior arts.
Furthermore, for many applications in photonic integrated circuits, electronic-photonic integrated circuits, and fiber-optics, the background extinction of the spectral power outside the wavelength range that is supposed to be detected is important, which measures the relative optical power from outside the detection wavelength range that is scattered into the output slit or photodetector of the spectrometer.
Spectral Output Power Efficiency
A parameter that measures such unwanted background scattering is the “adjacent-channel power extinction ratio”. As shown by
PSI1-O1(λ)=ηeffI1-O1(λ)*PSI1(λ). (3)
The factor ηeffI1-O1(λM) is the efficiency of passing or detecting the power of the input beam from input slit SLI1 at the output slit SLO1 at wavelength λM, assuming that the input beam is basically a monochromatic light source at λM (e.g. a narrow-bandwidth laser light). The factor ηeffI1-O1(λM) is called the “spectral power output efficiency”.
As shown in
PI1(λA;Δλ)=PSI1(λA)*Δλ. (4A)
Let the total optical power entering or being detected at output slit SLO1 1401 over a small spectral bandwidth Δλ centered at wavelength λA for the beam from input slit SLI1 be PI1-O1(λA; Δλ) 1331DL. PI1-O1(λA; Δλ) is then given by PSI1-O1(λA)*Δλ=ηeffI1-O1(λ)*PSI1(λ)Δλ according to Eq. (3). It is also given by ηeffI1-O1(λA)*(λA; Δλ). PI1-O1(λA; Δλ) is thus related to the spectral density of the input beam PSI1(λA) by:
PI1-O1(λA;Δλ)=PSI1-O1(λA)*Δλ=ηeffI1-O1(λA)*PSI1(λA)*Δλ. (4B)
In the situation that Δλ is large, Eqs. (4A) and (4B) should be more precisely converted to an integration of PSI1-O1(λ) with respect to wavelength λ over wavelength bandwidth Δλ centered at wavelength λ=λA given by:
Total Power and Power Spectrum
To define the “adjacent-channel power extinction ratio”, let the spectral resolution bandwidth for a beam at wavelength λI1-O1 1321 from input slit SLI1 1201 to output slit SLO1 1401 be ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res, as shown in
Then at an adjacent wavelength that is separated from λI1-O1 1321 by “one spectral resolution bandwidth” ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res away, the power detected over the same spectral resolution bandwidth ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res given by:
should ideally be zero at the output slit (as the spectral power output efficiency ηeffI1-O1(λ) shall be approximately zero when λ=λI1-O1+ΔλRes-I1-O1 is not at the supposed output detection/passing wavelength λI1-O1 1321 of output slot SLO1 and is at one resolution bandwidth ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res away from λI1-O1 1321).
Adjacent-Channel Extinction Ratio
The ratio of the power at λI1-O1 1321 and the power at λI1-O1+ΔλRes-I1-O1 given by:
ηace(λI1-O1)=PI1-O1(λI1-O1;ΔλRes-I1-O1)/PI1-O1(λI1-O1+ΔλRes-I1-O1;ΔλRes-I1-O1), (7)
is called the “adjacent-channel power extinction ratio” or “adjacent-wavelength power extinction ratio” or “adjacent wavelength-channel extinction ratio”, or “adjacent channel extinction ratio” for the beam from input slit SLI1 1201 to output slit SLO1 1401. It is also related to what is known to those skilled in the art as “adjacent-channel crosstalk rejection” or “adjacent-channel crosstalk extinction”. These terminologies will thus be used interchangeably below.
Adjacent Channel Extinction Ratio of a Spectrometer
Let ηace(λSM) denotes the adjacent channel extinction ratio for the spectrometer at its center operating wavelength λSM. It is called the “adjacent channel extinction ratio of a spectrometer”. This adjacent-channel extinction ratio ηace(λSM) is typically higher than about 100, especially when the size of the spectrometer is small (i.e. when the RASM factor is smaller than about 104). For many applications in photonic integrated circuits, electronic-photonic integrated circuits, and fiber-optics, ηace(λSM) higher than about 100, and RASM factor smaller than about 104 are desirable but they are largely not reachable via the methods in the prior arts.
Furthermore, for many applications in photonic integrated circuits, electronic-photonic integrated circuits, and fiber-optics, it is desirable that at the wavelength range of interest, the efficiency of passing or detecting the input spectral power be efficient, which is given by the spectral power output efficiency factor ηeffI1-O1(λI1-O1) defined above.
Spectral Power Output Efficiency of a Spectrometer
Let ηeff(λSM) denote the spectral power output efficiency ηeffI1-O1(λI1-O1) when the output slit wavelength λI1-O1 1321 is at the center operating wavelength λSM of the spectrometer. In an ideal situation, ηeff(λSM) shall be equal to unity (i.e. the number “1” so that the output power is equal to the input power or it has 100% passing or detection efficiency) or at least near unity. In many applications ηace(λSM) higher than about 100 with RASM factor smaller than about 104 and ηeff(λSM) higher than about 0.5 or having a higher than 50% passing/detection efficiency is desirable. In some other applications, ηace(λSM) higher than about 100 with RASM factor smaller than about 104, and ηeff(λSM) higher than about 0.1 (i.e. having a higher than 10% passing/detection efficiency) are desirable. These capabilities are desirable for the spectrometer but they are largely not reachable via the methods in the prior arts.
Conventional Rowland Gratings and their General Limitations
Although a small input slit width is required to achieve high spectral resolution for a spectrometer, a smaller input slit width WI1 1291W (see
Let the input beam be a monochromatic beam with wavelength λI1-O1 1321 (see
A half-diffraction angle of θdvdf-BI1-95%/2=4° corresponds to a slit width of about 25 microns (for an input beam wavelength around λI1-O1=1000 nm and n=1). In the current art, it is typically difficult to make slit width smaller than about 25 microns, and Rowland design is adequate for most present spectrometers with slit widths larger than about 25 microns (for a grating in air for which the beam propagation region has a refractive index of ngr=1).
Focusing Aberration Limitation:
In the case of the Rowland design, when (θdvdf-BI1-95%)/2>4 Degree(s) (DEG), serious aberration in the refocusing beam will occur to limit wavelength resolution (θdvdf-BI1-95% 1141 is the full divergence angle of the input beam due to spatial diffraction that we refer to as the “divergence-diffraction” (dvdf) angle. The 95% refers to the angle being defined by 95% of the beam power to be within the divergence angle). This is shown in
The sub-section below defines various more common terminologies useful for describing the prior arts as well as the present invention. As discussed above, curved-grating spectrometers, including those of the present invention, are specified by the geometrical configurations of its components as shown in
A center of the grating is defined, called the curved grating center CGC 1050. In applications, curved grating center CGC 1050 is generally designed to be the part of the grating hit by the center (i.e. high intensity point) of an input beam BI1 1101 that propagates towards the grating. In our convention, the groove situated at the grating center is numbered as groove 0. The grating is specified by the positions of all its grooves in general by a groove number i, where i is a positive or negative integer and includes zero.
Grating-Center Circle Normal Line and, Input Slit, and Grating Circle.
A line that passes through the grating center point, called the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N is defined. More specifically, as shown in
In the situation in which there are plurality of input slits, there is in general no requirement that these input slits be situated on this input circle, though preferably, their input angles will all be defined with respect to the same grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N.
Coordinate System Specification
To properly specify the grating grooves, the input slit, the output slit, and various components of a grating spectrometer, for the purpose of illustration and not limitation, it is convenient to set up a coordinate system that can be any coordinate system (e.g. Cartesian, polar, spherical coordinate system etc). For the purpose of illustration, as shown in
For a waveguiding case there is also no significant variation in the grating shape in the direction perpendicular to the plane where the grating lies, which is also the plane within which the beam propagates and is guided in the planar-waveguiding geometry.
Hence, in both the non-waveguiding applications as well as in a planar-waveguiding geometry, the geometrical shape of a groove can be described by a two-dimensional coordinate system and it is usually referred to as a “one-dimensional curve of a particular shape”.
Input/Output Slit Specification.
The input slit location is specified as follows (see
a first input distance SI1 1261 from the grating center CGC 1050 to the center point PXI1 1291O of the first input slit SLI1 1201, which is basically the length of the “grating-center to input-slit line” LI1 1251. The center point of the input slit (at point PXI1 1291O) has the coordinate XI1 1291OC.
The output slit location is specified as follows: the location of the center point PXO1 1491O of an output slit SLO1 is specified by a first output angle θO1 1471 that is an angle sustained between a line LO1 1481 joining the center point PXO1 1491O of the output slit SLO1 1401 to the grating center CGC 1050, and the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N. Line LO1 1451 is called “grating-center to output-slit line”. This θO1 1471 angle is positive if the output slit location is rotated about the grating center CGC 1050 towards the counter clockwise direction from the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N. The output slit location is further specified by a first output distance Sol 1461 from the grating center CGC 1050 to the center point PXO1 1491O of the first output slit SLO1 1401, which is basically the length of the “grating-center to output-slit line” LO1 1451. The center point of the output slit (at point PXO1 1491O) has the coordinate XO1 1491OC.
Grating-Center Curve, Grating-Center Tangent Line Construction, and Grating-Center Tangent Normal Line Definition.
As shown in
Outer Input Circle.
For the purpose of discussion, it is also useful to construct an “outer input-slit-and-grating circle” or simply called “outer input circle” OIC 1070 that has a diameter line LOICD 1070D with one end of the diameter line at the same grating center CGC 1050 and the diameter line LOICD is parallel and overlap with the diameter line LICD 1080D of the IC 1080. The x-y coordinates of the center of this “input circle” IC 1080 is then denoted by XIC 1080C. The radius of this “outer input circle” OIC 1070 is R (i.e. twice the radius of IC 1080). Hence, LOICD=2R. The x-y coordinates of the center of this “outer input circle” OIC 1070 is then denoted by XOIC 1070C.
Rowland Orating Design Case.
When the IC 1080 is discussed under the context of it being a “Rowland Circle” in the conventional Rowland grating design, we will use a similar labeling system, and will label the Rowland Circle as RC 1080R and its diameter line as LRCD 1080RD (i.e. RC corresponds to IC and LRCD corresponds to LICD). An Outer Rowland Circle ORC is defined like the Outer Input Circle OIC (i.e. ORC corresponds to OIC). The Outer Rowland Circle will be referred to as ORC 1070R and its diameter line as LORCD 1070RD (i.e. LORCD corresponds to LOICD).
It is important to note that though the circles of radius R/2 and radius R are also referred to as “Rowland circle” RC 1080R and “outer Rowland circle” ORC 1070R in a conventional application, in the present invention, they only serve as reference circles for illustrative purposes and not for the purpose of limitations. One purpose of IC 1080 and OIC 1070 are for comparison of the present invention to the so called Rowland curved grating design. In that situation, the input circle 1080 coincides with the Rowland circle 1080R and the outer input circle 1070 coincides with the outer Rowland circle 1080R. Another purpose is for estimating the physical size of the spectrometer. As yet another purpose is for illustrating the position of the input slit relative to the grating center. These circles are thus defined for the purpose of illustrations and not limitations. The purposes of IC 1080 and OIC 1070 differ from that of Rowland circle 1080R and outer Rowland circle 1070R. For example, in Rowland curved grating design, it is required that the output slit SLO1 be on Rowland circle 1080R and the grating groove positions be on the outer Rowland circle 1070R, but these are not the requirements in our present invention to be described later.
Grating Groove Position Specifications.
As noted above, for the purpose of illustrating this invention and not limitation, the shape of grating or grooves will be referred to with a curve using a two-dimensional coordinate system, not with a surface using a three-dimensional coordinate system.
The grooves are labeled by an integer that is counted starting from the groove right at the curved grating center CGC 1050, which is labeled as groove “0”. To one side, the grooves are labeled as i=1, 2, 3, 4, . . . . To the opposite side, the grooves are labeled as i=−1, −2, −3, −4 . . . . As shown in
Thus, in x-y coordinates, the input slit center location is given by XI1=(−SI1*Sin(θI1), SI1*Cos(θI1)). Let the angle θgrI1-i 161|i|P/N be the angle made by two lines pivoted (or joint) at the input slit location: the line joining the input slit location XI1 1291OC to the groove location Xi and the line joining the input slit location XI1 1291OC to the groove at grating center X0 1600O. The line joining the input slit location XI1 1291OC to the groove location Xi line is called line LI1-i, which can also be referred to as “input light ray to groove i” or ray LI1-i as it describes the light ray propagating from the input slit to the grating groove i at Xi. The line joining the input slit location XI1 1291OC to the groove at the grating center X0 1600O can also be referred to as “input light ray to grating center” or “input center ray” LI1-0. For the purpose of labeling in
θgrI1-i 161|i|P/N defined above can be used to give the divergence angle span of the input beam intercepted by the grating from the grating groove at i=0 up to groove number i, and may be referred to as the “input-ray angle at groove i” or alternatively called the “input-groove angle at goove i’. The value of θgrI1-i 161|i|P/N is zero when i=0 or Xi=X0, is positive when the end point of the line LI1-i 162|i|P/N at Xi, is rotated counter-clockwise (also called the direction “left” with the grating center as the front) around XI1 with XI1 as the pivot of rotation from θgrI1-i=0 and is negative when the end point of the line LI1-i 162|i|P/N at Xi, is rotated clockwise (also called the direction “right” with the grating center as the front) around XI1. The groove number i is a positive integer when θgrI1-i>0 and takes a value equals to the number of groove counted from the grating center to goove i with the grating center at i=0 (e.g. the next groove in the θgrI1-i>0 direction from i=0 is at i=1 etc). The groove number i is a negative integer when θgrI1-i<0 and takes a value equals to the negative of the number of groove counted from the grating center to goove i with the grating center at i=0 (e.g. the next groove in the θgrI1-i<0 direction from i=0 is at i=−1 etc).
Let the grating input left “angular span” be defined as θgrI1L 1651L where θgrI1L=|θgrI1-ML|, where j=ML is the maximum groove number to left side of the grating with j>0 and θgrI1-ML 161|ML|P is its input-groove angle (also called “input-ray angle at groove ML”). Let the grating input right angular span be defined as θgrI1R 1651R where θgrI1R=|θgRI1-MR|, j=MR is the maximum groove number to the right side of the grating with i<0 and ƒgrI1-MR 161|MR|N is its input-groove angle (also called “input-ray angle at groove MR”). Then the grating input total angular span θgrI1 1651 is defined as θgrI1=θgrI1L+θgrI1R=|θgrI1-ML|+|θgrI1-MR|.
For the purpose of labeling, X0 is 1600O, X1 is 1601P, X−1 is 1601N, etc. Note that i=|i| on the left θgrI1-i>0 side and i=−|i| on the right θgrI1-i<0 side. Hence, Xi is 160|i|N if i<0 and 160|i|P if i>0. Likewise, θgrI1-0=0 is 1610O, θgrI1-1 is 1611P, θgrI1-(−1) is 1611N, and θgrI1-i is 161|i|P/N means that it is 161|i|N if i<0 and 161|i|P if i>0. The suffix “N” stands for “i” being a negative number and “P” stands for “i” being a positive number. This labeling system could illustrate “i” from i=0 to at most up to i=9 or −9 (i.e. up to |i|=9, where “|x|” means taking the absolute value of the number x). However, those skilled in the art will know how to extend it further to groove number |i|>9 if needed.
For the output side, let the angle θgrO1-i be the angle made by two lines pivoted (or joint) at the output slit SLO1 location: the line joining the output slit location XO1 1491OC to the groove location Xi (called line LO1-I or “output light ray from groove i”) and the line joining the output slit location XO1 1491OC to the groove at grating center X0 1600O (called line LO1-0 or “output light ray from grating center”). Line LO1-0 is 1820O, LO1-1 is 1821P, LO1-(−1) is 1821N, and LO1-i is 182|i|N if i<0 and 182|i|P if i>0.
θgrO1-i defined above can be referred to as the “output-ray angle from groove i” or alternatively as “output-groove angle at groove i”. It describes the ray in the output beam that is converging from groove i to the output slit. The value of θgrO1-i is zero when i=0 or Xi=X0, is positive when the end point of the line LO1-I at Xi, is rotated counter-clockwise (also called the direction “left” with the grating center as the front) around XO1 with XO1 as the pivot of rotation from θgrO1-i=0 and is negative when the end point of the line LO1-1 at Xi, is rotated clockwise (also called the direction “right” with the grating center as the front) around XO1. In terms of illustration labeling, i=|i| on the left θgrO1r-i>0 side and i=−|i| on the right θgrO1r-i<0 side. Hence, θgrO1-0=0 is 1810O, θgrO1-1 is 1811P, θgrO1-(−1) is 1811N, and θgrO1-i is 181|i|N if i<0 and 181|i|P if i>0.
Let the grating output left angular span be defined as θgrO1L 1851L where θgrO1L=|θgrO1-MP|, where i=MP is the maximum groove number to left side of the grating with i>0 and θgrO1-MP 181|MP|P/N is its output-groove angle (also called “output-ray angle at groove MP”). Let the grating output right angular span be defined as θgrO1R 1851R where θgrO1R=|θgrO1-MN|, j=MN is the maximum groove number to the right side of the grating with j<0 and θgrO1-MN 181|MN|P/N is its output-groove angle (also called “output-ray angle at groove MN”). Then the grating output total angular span θgrO1 1851 is defined as θgrO1=θgrO1L+θgrO1R=|θgrO1-MP|+|θgrO1-MN|
Grating Groove Specification.
As is known to those skilled in the art, the main geometry of the curved diffraction grating is properly specified by specifying the center of each grating grooves called grating's “groove centers specification”. With this main geometry specified, the detailed geometry of the curved diffraction grating is then specified by further specifying the surface of each grating groove that passes through the groove center and joining to the surface of the adjacent groove, called grating's “groove surfaces specification”. As part of this “groove surfaces specification”, the efficiency of the grating's beam diffraction from an input slit to a particular output slit can be designed, manipulated, modified, or optimized. A process often referred to as “blazing the grating's reflecting surfaces”.
It is important to note that in conventional grating design, the groove surface facing the input beam is almost always chosen to be a straight line (or a flat plane surface) but oriented at an angle to optimize power diffracted to a particular output slit (a process called blazing the grating diffraction angle). The angle of the chosen output slit is called the “blazed angle”, the receiving wavelength of the chosen output slit is called the “blazed wavelength”. In the present invention, as will be described below, the grating “groove surface” design can further take on other shapes other than straight line.
Specifically as an example, at grating groove Xi, say i>0 (i<0 case can be easily deduced like other groove position nomenclature), let us look at groove X|i| and X|i|+1. At the location of X|i|, the grating groove surface that passes through X|i| and facing the input beam is given by the curvilinear line denoted by SF|i|+1 163|i|P. At the location of X|i|+1, the grating groove surface that passes through X|i|+1 and facing the input beam given by the curvilinear line denoted by SF|i|+1 163(|i|+1)P. The surface that is somewhat perpendicular to the surfaces SF|i|163|i|P and SF|i|+1 163(|i|+1)P that is used to join an edge of grating groove surface SF|i|163|i|P to the closest edge of SF|i|+1 163(|i|+1)P is given by the curvilinear line denoted by SF|i|,|i|+1 164(|i|, |i|+1)P. The important surfaces that reflect the input ray LI1-|i|162|i|P at groove X|i|160|i|P towards output ray LO1-|i|182|i|P is thus the surface SF|i|163|i|P. If the grating grooves are blazed to output slit SLO1, then surface SF|i|163|i|P (though it can be of various curvilinear shape in this invention, it typically can be approximated by a straight line or a flat plane surface) shall be oriented at an angle so that it acts as a directing mirror that reflects input ray LI1-|i|162|i|P to output ray LO1-|i|182|i|P. For example, if SF|i|163|i|P is a plane surface given by a straight line, then the normal to that line shall “bisect” the angle of incidence for the incident ray LI1-|i|162|i|P and the angle of reflection for the reflected ray LO1-|i|182|i|P.
“Groove Surface” Versus “Grating Surface”.
The “groove surface” is the surface at the individual groove level and is not to be confused with “grating surface” that is the average surface of the entire grating formed by basically joining the center points of all the grooves or fitting a curve through the center points of all the grooves.
Nomenclatures for Various More Specific Geometries of a Curved Grating Spectrometer or Wavelength Mux/deMux.
Note that the numbering system denoting the various geometrical components in
Exemplary Prior Art Based on Conventional Rowland Grating Design
In this subsection, we will describe an exemplary prior art based on conventional Rowland grating design and discuss their disadvantages. As a broad overview, a conventional curved grating spectrometer is made with a grating on a curved surface with a radius of curvature R. As shown in
More specifically, the grating center, grating input slit and output slit are placed a “Rowland circle” 5-1080R that has a radius of R/2 and a diameter line LRCD 5-1080RD as shown in
In an approach to specify the grating in accordance to the Rowland design, starting from the grating center CGC 5-1050, the locations of the first three grooves are specified; these are specified by its location vectors X1=(x1, y1) 5-1601P, X0=(0, 0) 5-1600O, and X−1-=(x−1, y−1) 5-1601N, where the x-axis is perpendicular to the Rowland Circle diameter line LRCD 5-1080D and hence is parallel to the Outer Rowland Circle diameter line LORCD 5-1070RD as well. The vectors X1 5-1601P and X−1 5-1601N and all Xi are all lying on the Outer Rowland Circle ORC 5-1070R. Let the groove's “perpendicular spacing” (or pitch) d1=|x1−x0| 5-1641P and d−1=|x−1−x0| 5-1641N, and let them be equal so that d=d1=d−1. The “perpendicular spacing” is defined as the spacing perpendicular to the Rowland Circle Diameter Line LRCD 5-1080D. The Outer Rowland Circle 5-1070R passes these three points X0 5-1600O, X1 5-1601P, and X−1 5-1601N forming the “grating-center curve” LGCC 5-1050CV and its radius R is referred to as the “radius of curvature of the grating center”.
Third, the location of the output slit SLO1 5-1401 should be on the Rowland circle and it is further specified by an angle θO1 5-1471 with respect to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 5-1050N and the distance SO1 5-1461 from the grating center to the output slit location SLO1 5-1401 on the Rowland Circle 5-1080R. For a given operating wavelength λI1-O1 5-1321, the initial groove′ perpendicular spacing d is usually chosen to satisfy the diffraction grating formula for a given output slit (or detector) location. The curved grating is further specified by the location of other grooves with the groove's perpendicular spacing di between groove i and the previous groove i−1 given by di=|xi−xi−1| 5-164|i|N (for i<0) or 5-164|i|P (for i>0). Thus, distance d1 is labeled as d1 5-1641P, and distance d−1 is labeled as d−1 5-1641N etc.
Let the total number of grooves be N in each side of the grating center. The locus of all the grooves defined by the lines that join all tips of the vectors X−N, . . . , X−1, X0, X1, . . . , XN together form a curved shape, which will all lie in the Outer Rowland Circle 5-1070R by design. The curved shape of the grating acts as an imaging element of the spectrometer that helps to focus the diverging beam from the input slit to the output slit.
More specifically, conventional Rowland grating design spectrometers are specifically configured by the design rule described below in conjunction with
Referring to
An output slit (or a photodetector) SLO1 5-1401 is also located on the same Rowland circle 5-1080R as the input slit SLI1 5-1201. In the Rowland design, the distance SO1 5-1461 of the output slit (or photodetector) SLO1 5-1401 to the grating center is related to the output angle of grating diffraction θO1 5-1471 by SO1=R*Cos(θO1) 5-1461.
During operation, an input light beam from the input slit SLI1 5-1201 will propagate to the curved grating CG 5-1010 and the different frequency components of the light beam will be dispersed by the curved grating CG 5-1010 to different directions. Part of the dispersed light then propagates to the output slit (or photodetector) SLO1 5-1401. The medium in which the light propagates in can be air or a material medium with an effective refractive index of propagation “ngr” 5-1040. In the case of free space, “ngr” 5-1040 is the material refractive index. In the case of a planar waveguide, “ngr” 5-1040 is the effective refractive index of propagation within the planar waveguide.
The relation between θI1 5-1271, θO1 5-1471, and the initial perpendicular groove spacing d is given by the grating formula,
d*(Sin(θO1)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O1/ngr (8)
where m is the diffraction order, ngr 5-1040 is the effective refractive index of propagation of the medium, λI1-O1 5-1321 is the wavelength of the spectral component in the input beam diffracted from the input slit SLI1 specified by the input angle θI1 5-1271 to the location of the output slit SLO1 specified by the output angle θO1 5-1471. Note that when θO1=−θI1, we have m=0, which is known as the zeroth order that corresponds to the “mirror” reflection from the grating. This grating formula is a so-called far-field approximation formula, which is valid only when SI1 and SO1 are much larger than d.
Initial groove positions are X0=(0,0) 5-1600O, X1=(d, R−(R2−d2)1/2) 5-1601P and X−1=(−d, R−(R2−d2)1/2) 5-1601N. These three initial grooves with position vectors X0, X1, and X−1 form the “grating-center curve”, and are located on a circle of radius R and have the initial groove's perpendicular spacing of di=d 5-164|i|P/N along a chord parallel to the grating-center tangent line LGCT 5-1050T (AB in
All other grooves, specified by its position vector Xi's, are located on the same outer Rowland circle of radius R 5-1070R defined by the initial three groove positions X0, X1, and X−1. Xi's are also equally spaced along a chord that is parallel to the tangent line LGCT 5-1050T to the grating-center curve LGCC 5-1050CV at the curved grating center CGC 5-1050. In other words, the projection of the displacement vector Xi−Xi−1 on this chord always has the same length. Specifically, the position vectors of these grooves can be written as Xi=(d*i, R−(R2−(d*i)2)1/2) for i>0, and Xi=(−d*|i|), R−(R2−(d*|i|)2)1/2) for i<0 (note that we can also write Xi=(d*i, R−(R2−(d*i)2) for i<0, the same equation as for i>0 case or alternatively for i<0 as X−j=(−d*j, R−(R2−(d*j)2)1/2) by taking j=−i so that j>0), where “*” denotes numerical multiplication and “i” is an integer denoting the ith groove so that “i” can take any of the values . . . −4, −3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, . . . etc.
The shape of each groove centered at Xi is typically not critical to the resolution power of the grating and hence is not necessary to be a part of the main specification. However, the groove shape is related to the diffraction efficiency. For example, in order to increase the diffraction efficiency at a particular output diffraction angle θO1 5-1471, it is typically made a planar surface for each groove, oriented in such a way that it acts like a tiny mirror reflecting the input ray towards the angle θO1 5-1471, a process typically referred to as blazing to output slit angle θO1 5-1471 (for a given input slit angle θI1 5-1271). A section of each groove which reflects light is physically a two-dimensional surface of a particular shape, not a one-dimensional curve. However, as the diffraction occurs in a planar geometry with the input and output beams all lying on a plane (in an x-y plane that is perpendicular to direction of the grating groove lines that are along the z-axis direction), the geometric shape of a groove is usually referred to as a “one-dimensional curve of a particular shape”. Thus, the shape of grating or grooves will be referred to with a curve, not with a surface.
An Exemplary Embodiment of a Rowland Grating Design with Echelle Configuration in Prior Art
In this subsection, we give a specific exemplary embodiment of a Rowland grating design with Echelle configuration in prior art. For example, if the radius of curvature at the grating center is R=100 μm, the Rowland circle 5-1080R, where the entrance slit or input slit 5-1201 and output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) 5-1401 are located, has the radius of R/2=50 μm. Here, we assume that tangent line LGCT 5-1050T at the grating-center curve LGCC 5-1050CV is parallel to the x-axis. The Rowland circle 5-1080R is tangent to the grating-center curve and it forms a circle by passing through both the grating center X0=(0,0) 5-1600O and a point (0, 50) (in unit of μm). If the angle of the input slit is θI1=45° 5-1271, the distance of the input slit to the grating center is SI1=R*Cos(θI1)=70.71 μm 5-1261 (SI1 is the length of LI1 5-1251). In terms of (x,y)-coordinate, the input slit is located at XI1 5-1291OC with XI1=(−50, 50). It is well-known that grating is more efficient if the propagation direction of the diffracted light from the grating is nearly parallel and opposite to the propagation direction of the input beam. Such a scheme is known as “Littrow configuration” and is widely used for a high-efficiency spectrometer. Another configuration of interest is grating used at high order m (e.g. m larger than approximately 10) with coarse grating groove distance and large input angle so that the side in which the grating groove has a narrower facet width is facing the input beam, which is called the “Echelle grating”. Echelle grating is often used in the Littrow configuration. Typically, this means that the input angle θI1 5-1271 is larger than about 45°. A Littrow configuration in the Rowland design will be equivalent to having the angle of output slit (or photodetector) being almost equal to the angle of the input slit, i.e., θI1≈θO1. Besides being at the Littrow configuration, the groove spacing d at the grating center has to be properly chosen so that it satisfies grating formula Eq. (8). For example, when the wavelength λI1-O1 5-1321 is 1550 nm and the angle of input slit is θI1=45° 5-1271, the diffraction order of m=12 of a grating with the groove spacing of d=4.2 μm at its center propagate toward a photodetector located at θO1=37.37° 5-1471, which is close to the Littrow configuration. The output slit (or photodetector) location can be fine tuned by changing the initial groove perpendicular spacing d. The lower the groove spacing d, the larger the output slit (or photodetector) angle θO1 5-1471. For the groove spacing d=4.2 μm and radius of curvature R=100 μm, the initial three positions of grooves are X0=(0,0), X1=(4.2, 0.088), and X−1=(−4.2, 0.088) (in unit of μm). Below, all the coordinates are understood to be in the unit of μm.
In the Rowland design, other grooves are located such that their spacing is the same along a chord parallel to the grating tangent at the center. Therefore, the position vectors of other grooves are Xi=(d*i, R−(R2−(d*i)2)1/2)=(4.2*i, 100−(1002−(4.2*i)2)1/2), and X−i=(−d*i, R−(R2−(d*i)2)1/2)=(−4.2*i, 100−(1002−(4.2*i)2)1/2). The position vectors of the grooves are listed in the following table for the case of Rowland design with R=100 μm, d=4.2 μm, m=12, θI1=45°, and θO1=37.37° for an operation wavelength of λI1-O1 of =1550 nm 1321.
(−42, 9.248)
(−21, 2.230)
A Summary of the Deficiencies in the Prior Art
The advent in Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) optical communication networks, however, requires that the multiple wavelengths in an optical fiber to be analyzed by spectral analysis devices that are much smaller in size than that of the current grating spectrometer. The challenge is to circumvent the current limitation in grating spectrometer design and fabrication methods. As discussed above, the current design basically cannot achieve the Resolution-vs-Area factor (RASM) much smaller than about 104. While several current technologies are capable of using planar waveguide technologies to make grating based spectrometers on a single silica or semiconductor substrate, they are still not able to achieve RASM much smaller than 104 (e.g. smaller than 100) due to the basic limitations of the grating spectrometer design. Achieving a smaller RASM factor is important for combining or integrating high-resolution grating spectrometers or wavelength multiplexer (Mux) and demultiplexer (deMux) with various photonic devices (such as lasers, modulators, or photodetectors in a compact module or silica/silicon/semiconductor wafer).
These wavelength-division-multiplexed (WDM) integrated photonic devices or modules would be of great importance for applications to Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexed (DWDM) networks. The costs of these integrated WDM devices are typically proportional to their sizes. The wavelength dispersion elements, such as the grating spectrometer or other form of wavelength filters and wavelength Mux/deMux, are typically about 100 times larger in size than any other photonic devices in the module or wafer. In order to reduce their costs substantially, it is desirable to reduce the size of these wavelength dispersion elements to as small a size as possible.
Thus, it is desirable to have grating based spectrometers that have an RASM factor of less than 100. It is also desirable to reduce the size, and hence the cost, of integrated WDM devices that are used in DWDM networks.
Beside size, it is also important for the spectrometer to have high adjacent channel extinction ratio ηace(λSM) and high spectral power output efficiency θeff(λSM).
For many applications in photonic integrated circuits, electronic-photonic integrated circuits, and fiber-optics, ηace(λSM) higher than about 100, RASM factor smaller than about 100, and ηeff(λSM) higher than about 0.1 (i.e. having a larger than 10% passing/detection efficiency) are desirable but they are not reachable via the methods in the prior arts.
The present invention discloses such a device and a method for making the same.
The present invention relates to semiconductor photonic, discrete optic, integrated optic, and opto-electronic devices. In particular, the present invention relates to optical spectrometers, wavelength channel multiplexers, wavelength channel demultiplexers, wavelength or frequency filters, wavelength combiners, wavelength splitters, optical spectrum analyzers, wavelength detectors, spectra dispersion devices, optical arbitrary waveform generators, optical dispersion compensators, optical signal processors, and optical wavelength-domain or frequency-domain processors, for combining, filtering, analyzing, processing, or detecting the spectral compositions of an input optical beam or plurality of input beams, with one or plurality of output beams, and method of making the same.
It is an aim of the invention to provide a compact curved grating and associated compact curved grating spectrometer or wavelength multiplexer and demultiplexer that is capable of achieving very small resolution-area factors (RASM) thereby enabling high resolution at small size. It is also capable of achieving high adjacent-wavelength power extinction ratio ηace(λSM), and high spectral output efficiency ηeff(λSM) at the detecting wavelength λSM.
The compact curved grating device can be constructed with discrete optical and mechanical components or can be integrated in a photonic integrated circuit or an electronic-photonic integrated circuit. The present invention discloses a device that will have a wide range of utilities and can be used as a device in optical spectrometers, wavelength channel multiplexers, wavelength channel demultiplexers, wavelength or frequency filters, wavelength combiners, wavelength splitters, optical spectrum analyzers, wavelength detectors, spectra dispersion devices, optical arbitrary waveform generators, optical dispersion compensators, optical signal processors, and optical wavelength-domain or frequency-domain processors, for combining, filtering, analyzing, processing, or detecting the spectral compositions of an input optical beam or plurality of input beams, with one or plurality of output beams, and methods of making the same.
It is another aim of the invention to provide a compact curved grating spectrometer module that can be used as an isolated optical spectrometer, discrete optical spectrometer module, or wavelength Mux/deMux module with integration possibility or as an isolated optical component, using either integration technology or free-space and discrete optics.
It is another aim of the invention to provide a compact curved grating spectrometer module that can be used as a wavelength dispersion element in a photonic integrated circuit.
In order to attain the above-mentioned aims, a compact curved grating and associated compact curved grating spectrometer or wavelength Mux/deMux with integration or discrete optics possibility is provided. The compact curved grating spectrometer includes an input slit (or waveguide), an output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) and a curved grating and the compact curved grating wavelength Mux/deMux includes a curved grating, at least an input slit or waveguide and at least an output slit or waveguide for propagating through at least an input light beam and at least an output light beam, respectively. The locations of the input slit (or waveguide) and the output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) can be adjusted to control the performance of the spectrometer or wavelength Mux/deMux. The distance between the grooves of the gratings depend on the location of the input slit (or waveguide), the output slit (or waveguide or photodetector), the center of the operation wavelength, the diffraction order and the refractive index of the medium. The resolution, size, and spectral processing capabilities of the spectrometer or wavelength Mux/deMux depend on the locations and sizes of one or plurality of the input slits (or waveguides), the locations and sizes of one or plurality of the output slits (or waveguides or photodetectors), the placement of each grating groove in the curved grating, the surface shape and surface orientation of each grating groove in the curved grating, and the angular span of the entire grating.
The preferred embodiments of the invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended drawings provided to illustrate and not to limit the invention, wherein like designations denote like elements, and in which
The present invention discloses a system comprising a compact curved grating (CCG), its associated compact curved grating spectrometer (CCGS) or wavelength Mux/deMux (WMDM) module and a method for making the same. The system is capable of achieving very small (resolution vs. size/area) RSSM/RASM factor thereby enabling high resolution at small size. It is also capable of achieving high adjacent-wavelength power extinction ratio ηace(λSM), and high spectral output efficiency ηeff(λSM) at the detecting wavelength λSM.
The uses of CCGS or WMDM module include an isolated optical spectrometer or wavelength Mux/deMux using discrete optical components such as slits, grating, spectrometer or wavelength Mux/deMux casing, photodetector, photodectector array, or motor drive. The CCGS or WMDM module could also be used as a wavelength dispersion element in a photonic integrated circuit or electronic-photonic integrated circuit.
The integrated circuit can be based on various materials including but not limited to glass (silica) waveguide, semiconductor waveguide, polymer waveguide, or any other type of optical waveguiding devices. Semiconductor waveguides include silicon or compound semiconductor waveguides such as III-V (GaAs, InP, InGaAsP, InAlAsP etc). The wavelength dispersion element based on the CCGS or WMDM module in the photonic integrated circuit can be integrated with optical detector, laser, amplifier, waveguide, modulator, splitter, multimode interference devices, other wavelength filters, array-waveguide-based devices, and other photonic devices, materials, or components to achieve a multi-component photonic integrated circuit with useful functionalities. The CCG explained below is a High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating (HR-CCG) that tries to alleviate the disadvantages associated with prior art mentioned earlier, by providing a high resolution in a small (compact) module with high spectral filtering performances such as high adjacent-wavelength power extinction and high spectral power output efficiency.
The present invention discloses a device that will have a wide range of utilities and can be used as a device in optical spectrometers, wavelength channel multiplexers, wavelength channel demultiplexers, wavelength or frequency filters, wavelength combiners, wavelength splitters, optical spectrum analyzers, wavelength detectors, spectra dispersion devices, optical arbitrary waveform generators, optical dispersion compensators, optical signal processors, and optical wavelength-domain or frequency-domain processors, for combining, filtering, analyzing, processing, or detecting the spectral compositions of an input optical beam or plurality of input beams, with one or plurality of output beams, and methods of making the same.
We have improved on the current Rowland design, enabling curved-grating spectrometer with 10-100 times smaller linear size (or 100-10,000 time smaller area) using our HR-CCG with large-angle aberration-corrected design. The typical Rowland design can only reach a useful divergence angle θdiv of ˜4 DEG, beyond which serous aberration in the refocusing beam will occur to limit wavelength resolution. In
We have used discrete time solution of vectorial Maxwell's equations to simulate the HR-CCG design, which verified the high resolution nature of our grating as predicted by the ray-tracing method. Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
The planar waveguiding region referred to above is basically the region in which wave or beam propagates between the input slit and the grating or the grating and the output slit and is basically the grating-propagating region referred to as GPR 1020 in
Above illustrate the various general geometrical configurations of the present invention for the purpose of illustration and not limitation. It would be obvious to those skilled in the art to combine, separate, or utilize the components in these illustrative configurations in various ways.
The subsection below further defines the common terminologies useful for describing the present invention.
It is known in the art that a relatively compact optical spectrometer can be achieved using a curved grating. The schematics of such a curved grating spectrometer device 1000 is shown in
Input Region Specification, Grating Center Circle Normal Line, and Grating-Center-to-Input-Slit Line.
A first input optical beam BI1 1101 entering a first input slit SLI1 1201, where the subscript “I1” is the label for “input” slit “1” or the “first” “input” slit. The width of the input slit is specified by a first input slit width WI1 1291W. The location of the center point PXI1 1291O of the first input slit SLI1 1201 is specified by a first input angle θI1 1271 that is an angle sustained between the line LI1 1251 joining the center point PXI1 1291O of the input slit SLI1 1201 to the grating center CGC 1050 (called “grating-center to input-slit line”), and a normal line to a circle described below at the grating center (called “grating-center circle normal line”) LGCCN 1050N. The input slit location is further specified by a first input distance SI1 1261 from the grating center CGC 1050 to the center point PXI1 1291O of the first input slit SLI1 1201. The first input angle θI1 1271 is zero when line LI1 1251 is parallel to grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N. The angle θI1 1271 takes on positive value when the line LI1 1251 is rotated counter-clockwise (CCW) about the grating center CGC 1050 from this zero-angle position, and takes on negative value when it is rotated clockwise (CW).
More specifically, as shown in
In the situation in which there are plurality of input slits, there is in general no requirement that these input slits be situated on this input circle, though preferably, their input angles will all be defined with respect to the same grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N.
Optical Axis Definition.
As shown by
Let xI measures the perpendicular distance from the optical axis point PZBI1 1151O to a point PZBI1(xP) 1161 for which xP>0 on left side of the optical axis and xP<0 on right side of the optical axis. More specifically, left means 9 O'clock side of the direct of propagation and right is 3 O'clock side if the direction of propagation is the 12 O'clock direction. Then I(xP,ZBI1) 1151I as a function of xP denotes the transverse or lateral intensity profile of the input beam at ZBI1 1151D.
Input-Slit-Width Angle and Input-Slit-Mouth Line.
Let the width of the input slit WI1 1291W spans an angle δθI1 1281 at the grating center (called “angle sustained by input slit width” or “input-slit-width angle”) so that the CCW side (or left side; with front facing the slit) of the edge of the slit is at angle θI1+δθLI1/2 and the CW side (or right side) of the slit is at θI1−δθRI1/2 where δθLI1/2 1281L and δθRI1/2 1281R are the angular span to the “left” and the “right” of input angle θI1 for the input slit. Here, the direction from the curved grating center CGC 1050 to the input slit SLO1 1201 is the front direction or 12 O'clock direction and the left/right side is the counter-clockwise/clockwise side towards the 9/3 O'clock direction. This will be the sign conventions for all the angles below that are referencing the curved grating center CGC 1050 as the pivot of rotation.
The left edge of the first input slit at angle θI1+δθLI1/2 is denoted as point PXLI1 1291L. The location of the right edge of the first input slit at angle θI1−δθRI1/2 is denoted as point PXRI1 1291R. The points PXI1 1291O, PXLI1 1291L, and PXRI1 1291R is an approximate straight line and point PXI1 1291O is at the middle of the line joining point PXLI1 1291L and point PXRI1 1291R, called the “first input slit mouth line” L(PXLI1-PXRI1). Thus, typically the left and right sides of the above angular spans are equal so that δθLI1=δθRI1=δθI1.
The spatial x-y coordinates for the points at the input slits are: for PXI1 1291O its x-y coordinates are denoted by XI1 1291OC; for PXLI1 1291L its x-y coordinates are denoted by XLI1 1291LC; for PXRI1 1291R its x-y coordinates are denoted by XRI1 1291RC. The width of the input slit WI1 is then given by WI1=|XLI1−XRI1| 1291W.
Typically line L(PXLI1-PXRI1) is designed so that it is perpendicular to the input line LI1 1251, though it is not always so.
While the input-slit-mouth line L(PXLI1-PXRI1) may or may not be perpendicular to the input line LI1 1251, the launching of the input beam BI1 1101 is done in a way so that its optical axis of propagation given by line LBI1 1151OL in
Relation Between Input-Center Ray, Input Optical Axis, and Grating-Center-to-Input-Slit Line, and Plurality of Input Slits.
Note that input center ray LI1-0 1620O and the input beam optical axis LBI1 1151OL are normally close to coinciding with each other. Also the input beam optical axis LBI1 1151OL and grating-center-to-input-slit line LI1 1251 are normally close to coinciding with each other. Thus, the point PXI1 1291O where the grating-center-to-input-slit line LI1 1251 meets the input slit at coordinate XI1 1291OC is normally close to the same point as the point where the input beam optical axis LBI1 1151OL meets the input slit at coordinate XBI1 11810.
The x-y coordinates for the various input beam points at the input slit location are given as follows: the x-y coordinate for the optical axis LBI1 1151OL at the input slit location is denoted by XBI1 1181OC; the x-y coordinate for the line LRBI1-IP % 1151RL at the input slit location is denoted by XRBI1-IP % 1181RC; the x-y coordinate for the line LLBI1-IP % 1151LL at the input slit location is denoted by XLBI1-IP % 1181LC. The beam width at the input slit location is denoted by WBI1-IP %=|XLBI1-IP %−XRBI1-IP % 11181W.
In general, there may be more than one input slit and the second input slit will be labeled as SLI2 1202. Likewise, input slit “n” will be labeled as SLI′n′120″n″. All the other geometrical parameters will also follow the same numbering system as this numbering system. For example, the input line for the second input slit will be labeled as line LI2 1282. Likewise, input line for the input slit “n” will be labeled as LI′n′128″n″ (i.e. by changing the last digit to correspond to the slit number) etc. This labeling system could illustrate “i” from i=0 to at most up to i=9 or −9 (i.e. up to |i|=9, where “|x|” means taking the absolute value of the number x). However, those skilled in the art will know how to extend it further to groove number |i|>9 if needed.
As the input beam exit input slit SLI1 1201, due to optical diffraction, the input beam width will also become larger giving rise to a spatially diverging beam width when the beam propagates towards the grating. The angle along which the beam diverges is called the beam's divergence angle as already discussed above. As explained there, the definition of interest for the divergence angle will depend on the applications involved.
Output Region Specification.
The curvature of the grating helps to refocus the diverging beam from the first input slit SLI1 1201 to a first output slit SLO1 1401 with a first output slit width WO1 1491W, where the subscript “O1” is the label for “output” slit “1” or the “first” “output” slit. Note that the term “output slit” is also referred to as “exit slit” below so that the terms “output slit” and “exit slit” will be used totally interchangeably. Similarly, the terms “input slit” and “entrance slit” will be used totally interchangeably.
As shown in
Output-Slit-Width Angle and Output-Slit-Mouth Line.
Let the width of the output slit WO1 1491W spans an angle δθO1 1481 (called “angle sustained by output slit width” or “output-slit-width angle”) at the grating center so that the CCW side (or left side; with front facing the slit) of the edge of the slit is at angle θO1+δθLO1/2 and the CW side (or right side) of the slit is at θO1−δθRO1/2 where δθLO1/2 1481L and δθRO1/2 1481R are the angular span to the “left” and the “right” of output angle θO1 for the output slit. Here, the direction from the curved grating center CGC 1050 to the output slit SLO1 1401 is the front direction or 12 O'clock direction and the left/right side is the counter-clockwise/clockwise side towards the 9/3 O'clock direction. This will be the sign conventions for all the angles below that are referencing the curved grating center CGC 1050 as the pivot of rotation.
The left edge of the first output slit at angle θO1+δθLO1/2 is denoted as point PXLO1 1491L. The location of the right edge of the first input slit at angle θO1−δθRO1/2 is denoted as point PXLO1 1491R. The points PXO1 1491O, PXLO1 1491L, and PXRO1 1491R form a straight line and point PXO1 1491O is at the middle of the line joining point PXLO1 1491L and point PXRO1 1491R, called the “first output-slit-mouth line” L(PXLO1-PXRO1). Thus, the left and right sides of the above angular spans are equal so that δθLO1=δθRO1=δθO1.
The spatial x-y coordinates for the points at the output slits are: for PXO1 1491O its x-y coordinates are denoted by XO1 1491OC; for PXLO1 1491L its x-y coordinates are denoted by XLO1 1491LC; for PXRO1 1491R its x-y coordinates are denoted by XRO1 1491RC. The width of the output slit WO1 is then given by WO1=|XLO1−XRO1| 11491W.
Typically line L(PXLO1-PXRO1) is designed so that it is perpendicular to the output line LO1 1451, though it is not always so.
While the first “output-slit-mouth line” L(PXLO1-PXRO1) may or may not be perpendicular to the output line LO1 1451, the receiving of the output beam BI1-O1 1301 is done in a way so that its optical axis of propagation given by line LBI1-O1 1351OL in
In general, there may be more than one output slit and the second output slit will be labeled as SLO2 1402. Likewise, output slit “n” will be labeled as SLO′n′140″n″. All the other geometrical parameters will also follow the same numbering system as this numbering system. For example, the output line for the second output slit will be labeled as line LO2 1482. Likewise, output line for the output slit “n” will be labeled as LO′n′148″n″ (i.e. by changing the last digit to correspond to the slit number) etc.
Output “Geometrical Spectral Width”.
Let δλLI1-O1/2 1321L be the deviation from the output center wavelength λI1-O1 1321 to the “left” such that the new wavelength λI1-O1+δλLI1-O1/2 will give output angle θO1+δθLO1/2 or θI1-Out(λI1-O1+δλLI1-O1/2)=θO1+δθLO1/2. Hence, the equation θI1-Out(λI1-O1+δλLI1-O1/2)=θO1+δθLO1/2 can also be used to define δλLI1-O1/2 1321L. Likewise, Let δλRI1-O1/2 1321R be the deviation from the output center wavelength λI1-O1 1321 to the “right”, which is then given by θI1-Out(λI1-O1−δλRI1-O1/2)=θO1−δθRO1/2. Note that δλLI1-O1/2 1321 LRes or δλRI1-O1/2 1321RRes may take on a positive or a negative value. The right edge wavelength is λRI1-O1=λI1-O1+δλRI1-O1/2 1321R. The left edge wavelength is λLI1-O1=λI1-O1+δλLLI1-O1/2 1321L. The total spectral deviation is
Adding the left and right wavelength deviations that span the range of angle that covers the output slit width then gives the “output geometrical spectral width” or “output geometrical resolution” δλI1-O1 (in wavelength) 1381GRes at output slit SLO1 1401 for the beam from input slit SLI1 1201, where δλI1-O1=|δλLI1-O1/2|+|δλRI1-O1/2| 1381GRes. This spectral width δλI1-O1 1381GRes will be referred to as the “first output slit geometrical spectral width for beam from the first input slit” or simply as “first output slit geometrical spectral width” when the context is clear which input slit the beam comes from.
Output Spectral Resolution Bandwidth and Output Power Spectrum.
In an “ideal situation”, the output power spectrum PSI1-O1(λ) 1331 received/passed/detected by the first output slit would be from the input beam spectrum PSI1(λ) 1131 between wavelengths λRI1-O1=XI1-O1−δλRI1-O1/2 1321R and λLI1-O1=XI1-O1+δλLI1-O1/2 1321L around the center wavelength λI1-O1 1321, where δλLI1-O1/2 1321 LRes and δλRI1-O1/2 1321RRes correspond to the angular deviations to the left and right side of the diffraction angle of this center wavelength 1321. Adding the left and right wavelength deviations that span the range of angle that covers the output slit width then gives the “output geometrical spectral width” or “output geometrical resolution” δλI1-O1 (in wavelength) 1381GRes at output slit SLO1 1401 for the beam from input slit SLI1 1201, where δλI1-O1=|δλLI1-O1/2|+|δλRI1-O1/2| 1381GRes.
The spectral width of the actual output power spectrum is called the “spectral resolution bandwidth” denoted as ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res. It is defined more precisely below. In the ideal situation, ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res is basically equal to the “output geometrical spectral width” δλI1-O1 1381GRes or ΔλRes-I1-O1=δλI1-O1.
However, in practice, due to spatial aberration of the output beam, the actual spectral resolution bandwidth denoted as ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res that take into account the spatial spread of the output beam width and spatial distortion of the beam when it focuses at the output slit 1401 location is larger than the ideal situation determined by geometry so that actual spectral resolution bandwidth ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res is larger than the output geometrical spectral width″ δλI1-O1 1381GRes or ΔλRes-I1-O1>δλI1-O1.
Output Power Spectrum and Spectral Power Output Efficiency.
The “output power spectrum” after the beam from input slit SLI1 1201 goes through output slit SLO1 1401 is denoted by PSI1-O1(λ) 1331. It can be expressed in terms of the input beam power spectrum by: PSI1-O1(λ)=ηeffI1-O1(λ)*PSI1(λ), where ηeffI1-O1(λ), with a value between 0 and 1, is the efficiency factor for receiving/passing/detecting the input beam spectrum at the wavelength λ, called the “spectral power output efficiency” at wavelength λ.
Output Power.
The optical power received/passed/detected by the first output slit SLO1 1401 called the “output power for a beam going from input slit SLI1 1201 to output slit SLO1 1401 over a small spectral bandwidth Δλ centered at wavelength λA (small comparing to the spectral bandwidth of PSI1-O1(λ) at λA or more precisely, small enough so that PSI1-O1(λ) at λA does not change much over the wavelength bandwidth Δλ) for the beam from input slit SLI1 be PI1-O1(λA; Δλ). PI1-O1(λA; Δλ) is then given by PSI1-O1(λA)*Δλ and is thus related to the spectral density of the input beam PSI1(λA) by:
PI1-O1(λA;Δλ)=PSI1-O1(λA)*Δλ=ηeffI1-O1(λA)*PSI1(λA)*Δλ. (9)
In the situation that Δλ is large, Eq. (9) should be more precisely converted to an integration of PSI1-O1(λ) with respect to wavelength λ over wavelength bandwidth Δλ centered at wavelength λ=λA given by:
Total Output Power.
The total optical power received/passed/detected by the first output slit called the “total output power for a beam going from input slit SLI1 1201 to output slit SLO1 1401” is then given by PI1-O1(λ; Δλ) above, with the wavelength λ given by the output center wavelength λI1-O1 1321 and the spectral width Δλ given by the spectral resolution bandwidth ΔλRes-I1-O1 1381Res or more precisely integrated over the entire wavelength, and is denoted as PI1-O1. That is, it is approximately given by:
PI1-O1=PI1-O1(λI1-O1;ΔλRes-I1-O1)=ηeffI1-O1(λI1-O1)*PSI1(λI1-O1)*ΔλRes-I1-O1. (11)
Or by more precisely by the integration below:
Light through the first output slit SLO1 1401 is then detected by a first photodetector DetO1 1311.
Definition of Input Beam's Divergence-Diffraction Angle at Integrated Power Point.
Let us denote the input beam's full divergence angle due to diffraction from the input slit by θdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141, which is defined by the angle made between the two lines traced out by the beam intensity locus points PRBI1-IP % 1151R (coordinate at XRBI1-IP % 1151RC) and PLBI1-IP % 1151L (coordinate at XLBI1-IP % 1151LC) on both sides of the beam, where PRBI1-IP % 1151R, and PLBI1-IP % 1151L are the locations of the intensity points such that the integrated power of the beam from the beam's intensity peak to each of the intensity point is IP/2 percent (IP/2%), where IP % is given by the parameter in the subscript of θdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141. Adding up both the left and right sides will give the percentage of the integrated optical power (IP %) between points PRBI1-IP % 1151R and PLBI1-IP % 1151L. Thus IP % denotes the percentage of the integrated power of the beam between points PRBI1-IP % 1151R and PLBI1-IP % 1151L of the beam perpendicular to the beam axis of propagation. This angular of divergence of the input beam is due to optical beam diffraction effect from a small finite aperture formed by the input slit width, as is also called the beam's diffraction angle. Thus, we will refer to it as “divergence-diffraction angle”. It should not be confused with another diffraction effect which is the diffraction of the input beam to different output angles by the curved grating CG 1010. In that case it is called the “grating diffraction angle”. The angle θdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141 defined here will be called the “Input beam's divergence-diffraction angle at IP % integrated power point”. It is labeled with subscript “dvdf” referring to divergence-diffraction.
Definition of Input Beam's Right/Left Half-Divergence-Diffraction Angle at Integrated Power Point.
The locus points PRBI1-IP % forming the line LRBI1-IP % 1151RL hit the grating surface at point IGRBI1-IP % 1171R and the locus points PLBI1-IP % forming the line LLBI1-IP % 1151LL hit the grating surface at point IGLBI1-IP % 1171L. The angle sustained by the line LRBI1-IP % 1151RL and the optical axis LBI1 1151OL is the “right half-divergence-diffraction angle at IP % integrated power point” θRdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141R. The angle sustained by the line LLBI1-IP % 1151LL and the optical axis LBI1 1151OL is the “left half-divergence-diffraction angle at IP % integrated power point” θLdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141L. The two angles are typically equal to each other though not always so and they added up to be equal to the divergence-diffraction angle θdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141 so that: θdvdf-BI1-IP %=θRdvdf-BI1-IP+θLdvdf-BI1-IP %. When the context is clear, these angles will be referred to simply as the input beam divergence angles.
Definition of Beam Width at IP % Integrated Power.
The distance between two points XRBI1-IP % and XLBI1-IP % given by: |XRBI1-IP %−XLBI1-IP %| and denoted as WBI1-IP %(ZBI1) 1151W (with WBI1-IP %(ZBI1)=|XRBI1-IP %−XLBI1-IP %|) is referred to as the beam's width encompassing (or at) “IP % of the integrated center beam power”.
For example with IP %=50%, θdvdf-BI1-50% is the divergence angle defined by the angle made between the two lines traced out by the beam intensity locus points PRBI1-50% 1151R (coordinate at XRBI1-50% 1151RC) and PLBI1-50% 1151L (coordinate at XLBI1-50% 1151LC) on both sides of the beam that each encompasses 25% of the power of the beam from the beam's optical axis to each of the intensity point at PLZBI1-50% or PRZBI1-50% so that [∫0X
Relation to the Usual “Angle of Beam Divergence” at 1/e Intensity Point.
It is useful to relate this beam width and beam divergence angle definitions to the more commonly used definitions based on Gaussian beam approximation and description. As is known to those skilled in the art, for the purpose of estimation and description, often an optical beam such as the input beam can be approximated or fitted with a Gaussian beam intensity profile I(x,ZBI1)=I(0,ZBI1)*Exp(−x2). Let the fitted Gaussian beam width WBI1-1=1/e be defined by 1/e points of the Gaussian beam intensity profile, which is the points XLB-I=1/e and XRB-I=1/e at which I(xLB-I=1/e,ZBI1)=(1/e)*I(0,ZBI1) and I(xRB-I=1/e,ZBI1)=(1/e)*I(0,ZBI1) so that WBI1-1=1/e=XLB-1=1/e−XRB-I=1/e. It can be shown that WBI1-1=1/e is approximately equal to (1/2.3) of WBI1-IP %=95% so that WBI1-1=1/e˜(WBI1-95%/2.3). The term “angle of beam divergence” or also called “angle of beam diffraction” in the literature commonly referred to is defined as the angle made between the two lines defined by the locus points traced out by xLB-I=1/e and XRB-I=1/e, and will be denoted by θdvdf-BI1-I=1/e. It will be referred to as “Input beam's divergence angle at 1/e intensity point”.
In order not to be confused with “angle of grating diffraction”, we prefer to refer to this angle of beam width spreading as “angle of beam divergence-diffraction” or simply as “angle of beam divergence”. It is important to note that for our applications, we need to deviate from this common terminology and there is no one single “angle of beam divergence”. The “angle of beam divergence” of interest is depending on design needs and the angle θdvdf-BI1-IP % 1141 as defined above describes the “x” percentage of integrated center beam power (with IP %=x %) being encompassed by the angles. It will be used to describe the various angles of divergence of interest below as they will be more specifically relevant and useful, instead of that more commonly used in the literature based on Gaussian beam approximation and description.
Definition of the Beam Waist Under Gaussian Beam Approximation and the Divergence Angle at 1/e Intensity Point of the Beam.
If we approximate or decompose the input beam in terms of the Gaussian beam at the fundamental mode, we can let WBI1-I=1/e(x=0,ZBI1=0) be the Gaussian beam waist at the input slit mouth (i.e. at ZBI1=0) at which the wavefront is flat. Note that the location along the optical axis (i.e. the ZBI1 defined above) at which the Gaussian beam or any optical beam has a flat wavefront is referred to in the art as the “beam waist” of the beam propagation.
If we approximate or decompose the input beam in terms of the Gaussian beam at the fundamental mode, the first input beam angle of divergence at 1/e intensity points denoted by θdvdf-BI1-I=1/e can be given approximately in terms of its 1/e Gaussian beam's approximated beam waist WBI1-I=1/e(x=0,ZBI1=0). It is θdvdf-BI1-I=1/e=2*(λBI1/(Pi*WBI1-I=1/e(x=0,ZBI1=0))) (in Radian), where λBI1 1121 is the “first input-beam center wavelength” shown in
Output Beam's Propagation and Optical Axis.
Let ZBI1-O1 1351D measures the distance of propagation along the optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL of the output beam from the curved grating CG 1010 to output slit SLO1 1201 so that ZBI1-O1=0 at the curved grating surface and ZBI1-O1>0 when the beam propagates towards the output slit. The output beam is obtained from the input beam from input slit SLI1 reflected and diffracted by the grating. The optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL hits the grating surface at point OGBI1-O1 1371O at which ZBI1-O1=0. A point on the optical axis at zI=ZBI1-O1 is called point PZBI1-O1 1351. The x-y coordinates for that point is referred to as XZBI1-O1 1351C. The optical axis line for the output beam is made up by the locus points traced out by points PZBI1-O1 1351 or coordinates XZBI1-O1 1351C. This optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL is referred to as the output beam's convergence-focusing optical axis.
In the typical application, point OGBI1-O1 1371O is assumed to coincide with point IGBI1 1171O for the input beam. The optical axis is typically defined by the locus points traced out by the peak intensity of the fundamental mode of the input beam. Let xI measures the perpendicular distance from the optical axis point PZBI1-O1 1351 to a point PLZBI1-O1(xP) 1361 for which xP>0 on left side of the optical axis and xP<0 on the right side. More specifically, left means 9 O'clock side of the direct of propagation and right is 3 O'clock side if the direction of propagation is the 12 O'clock direction. Then I(xP,ZBI1-O1) as a function of xP denotes the transverse or lateral intensity profile of the output beam at ZBI1-O1 1351D.
Output Beam's Full Convergence-Focusing Angle.
Assuming the input beam is a monochromatic source or a light beam with a very narrow spectral width at wavelength λI1-O1. Then after the monochromatic input beam is diffracted by the curved grating, the grating's surface curvature and diffraction properties will act together to focus the output beam with a focusing angle that is converging the beam size to a small focused spot at the output slit. The angle of focusing will be called the convergence-focusing angle. Let us denote this output beam's full convergence-focusing angle by θcvfo-BI1-O1-IP % 1341, which is defined by the angle made between the two lines traced out by the beam intensity locus points PRBI1-O1-IP % 1351R (coordinate at XRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RC) and PLBI1-O1-IP % 1351L (coordinate at XLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LC) on both sides of the beam, where PRBI1-O1-IP % 1351R, and PLBI1-O1-IP % 1351L are the locations of the intensity points such that the integrated power of the beam from the beam's intensity peak to each of the intensity point is IP/2 percent (IP/2%), where IP % is given by the parameter in the subscript of θcvfo-BI1-O1-IP % 1341. Adding up both the left and right sides will give the percentage of the integrated optical power (IP %) between points PRBI1-O1-IP % 1351R and PLBI1-O1-IP % 1351L. Thus IP % denotes the percentage of the integrated power of the beam between points PRBI1-O1-IP % 1351R and PLBI1-O1-IP % 1351L of the beam perpendicular to the beam's optical axis of propagation. This angular of divergence of the input beam is due to optical beam diffraction effect from a small finite aperture formed by the input slit width, as is also called the beam's diffraction angle. Thus, we will refer to it as “convergence-focusing angle”. The angle θcvfo-BI1-O1-IP % 1341 defined here will be called the “Out beam's convergence-diffraction angle at IP % integrated power point”. It is labeled with subscript “cvfo” referring to convergence-focusing.
Meeting of the Output Beam and Input Beam at the Grating Surface.
The locus points xLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LC is assumed to hit the grating surface at point OGLBI1-O1-IP % 1371L and the locus points XRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RC hits the grating surface at point OGRBI1-O1-IP % 1371R. Above, we already describe the optical axis LBI1-O1 1151OL traced out by locus points xBI1-O1 1151OC is assumed to hit the grating surface at point OGBI1-O1 1371O. In the typical application, point OGLBI1-O1-IP % 1371L is assumed to coincide with point IGLBI1-IP % 1171L for the input beam and OGRBI1-O1-IP % 1371R is assumed to coincide with point IGRBI1-IP % 1171R for the input beam.
The coordinates for all these points at the grating surfaces are: the coordinate for OGBI1-O1 1371O is XGBI1-O1 1371OC; the coordinate for OGRBI1-O1-IP % 1371R is XGRBI1-O1-IP % 1371RC; the coordinate for OGLBI1-O1-IP % 1371L is XGLBI1-O1-IP % 1371LC; the coordinate for IGBI1-IP % 1171 is XGBI1-IP % 1171C; the coordinate for IGRBI1-IP % 1171R is XGRBI1-IP % 1171RC; the coordinate for IGLBI1-IP % 1171L is XGLBI1-IP % 1171LC; the coordinate for CGC 1050 is X0.
Definition of Beam Width at IP % Integrated Power.
The distance between two points XRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RC and XLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LC given by: |XRBI1-O1-IP %−XLBI1-O1-IP %| and denoted as WBI1-O1-IP %(ZBI1-O1) 1351W (with WBI1-O1-IP %(ZBI1-O1)=|XRBI1-O1-IP %−XLBI1-O1-IP %|) is referred to as the beam's width encompassing (or at) “IP % of the integrated center beam power”.
Definition of Output Beam's Right/Left Half-Convergence-Focusing Angle at Integrated Power Point.
The locus points PRBI1-O1-IP % forming the line LRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RL hit the grating surface at point OGRBI1-O1-IP % 1371R and the locus points PLBI1-O1-IP % forming the line LLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LL hit the grating surface at point OGLBI1-O1-IP % 1371L. The angle sustained by the line LRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RL and the optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL is the “right half-convergence-focusing angle at IP % integrated power point” θRcvfo-BI1-O1-IP % 1341R. The angle sustained by the line LLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LL and the optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL is the “left half-convergence-focusing angle at IP % integrated power point” θLcvfo-BI1-O1-IP % 1341L. The two angles are typically equal to each other though not always so and they added up to be equal to the divergence-diffraction angle θcvfo-BI1-O1-IP % 1341 so that: θcvfo-BI1-O1-IP %=θRcvfo-BI1-O1-IP %+θLcvfo-BI1-O1-IP %. When the context is clear, these angles will be referred to simply as the output beam convergence angles.
Relation Between Output-Center Ray, Output Optical Axis, and Grating-Center-to-Output-Slit Line, and Plurality of Output Slits.
In the situation in which the input is a monochromatic beam at wavelength λI1-O1 1321, the output beam after reflection and diffraction from the grating is a well-defined beam and we can refer to various output-beam related variables including output-center ray, output optical axis etc. Note that “output-center ray” LO1-0 1820O and the “output beam optical axis” LBI1-O1 1351OL are normally close to coinciding with each other. Also the “output beam optical axis” LBI1-O1 1351OL and “grating-center-to-Output-slit line” LO1 1451 are normally close to coinciding with each other.
The x-y coordinates for the various output beam points at the output slit location are given as follows: the x-y coordinate for the optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL at the output slit location is denoted by XBI1-O1 1381OC; the x-y coordinate for the line LRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RL at the output slit location is denoted by XRBI1-O1-IP % 1381RC; the x-y coordinate for the line LLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LL at the output slit location is denoted by XLBI1-O1-IP % 1381LC. The beam width at the output slit location (called “output-slit beam width”) is denoted by WBI1-O1-IP %=|XLBI1-O1-IP %−XRBI1-O1-IP %| 1381W.
Thus, the point PXO1 1491O where the grating-center output slit line LO1 1451 meets the output slit at coordinate XO1 1491OC is normally close to the same point as the point where the output beam optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL meets the output slit at coordinate XBI1-O1 13810C.
Output Beam's Focused Beam Waist Location and Beam Waist Width.
As noted above, if the input beam is a monochromatic beam at wavelength λI1-O1 1321, then the output beam typically will achieve a minimal beam width at or around some spatial location. We shall call that the output focused beam waist location XBI1-O1 1391OC. The beam waist width at that location is denoted by WBI1-O1-IP % 1391W and is called the beam waist width of the output beam.
The x-y coordinates for the various output beam points at this beam waist location are given as follows: the x-y coordinate for the optical axis LBI1-O1 1351OL at the output beam waist location is denoted by XBI1-O1 1391OC; the x-y coordinate for the line LRBI1-O1-IP % 1351RL at the output beam waist location is denoted by XRBI1-O1-IP % 1391RC; the x-y coordinate for the line LLBI1-O1-IP % 1351LL at the output beam waist location is denoted by XLBI1-O1-IP % 1391LC. The beam width at the input slit location is denoted by WBI1-IP %=|XLBI1-IP %−XRBI1-IP %| 1181W.
Output Beam's Full Divergence-Diffraction Angle.
It is also useful to think of launching an optical beam from the output slit instead of the input slit and see how its angle of propagation diffracts. Let us called that the reversed output beam BOR1 1301R, as shown in
This divergence-diffraction of the output beam from output slit SLO1 is shown in
Optical axis definition. As shown by
Let xI measures the perpendicular distance from the optical axis point PZBO1 1551O to a point PZBO1(xP) 1561 for which xP>0 on left side of the optical axis and xP<0 on right side of the optical axis. More specifically, left means 9 O'clock side of the direct of propagation and right is 3 O'clock side if the direction of propagation is the 12 O'clock direction. Then I(xP,ZBO1) 1551I as a function of xP denotes the transverse or lateral intensity profile of the input beam at ZBO1 1551D.
Definition of Output Beam's Right/Left Half-Divergence-Diffraction Angle at Integrated Power Point.
The locus points PRBO1-IP % 1551R forming the line LRBO1-IP % 1551RL hit the grating surface at point IGRBO1-IP % 1571R and the locus points PLBO1-IP % 1551L forming the line LLBO1-IP % 1551LL hit the grating surface at point IGLBO1-IP % 171 1571L. The angle sustained by the line LRBO1-IP % 1551RL and the optical axis LBO1 1551OL is the “right half-divergence-diffraction angle at IP % integrated power point” θRdvdf-BO1-IP % 1541R. The angle sustained by the line LLBO1-IP % 1551LL and the optical axis LBO1 1551OL is the “left half-divergence-diffraction angle at IP % integrated power point” θLdvdf-BO1-IP % 1541L. The two angles are typically equal to each other though not always so and they added up to be equal to the divergence-diffraction angle θdvdf-BO1-IP % 1541 so that: θdvdf-BO1-IP %=θRdvdf-BO1-IP %+θLdvdf-BO1-IP %. When the context is clear, these angles will be referred to simply as the output beam divergence angles.
The x-y coordinates for the various output beam points at the output slit location are given as follows: the x-y coordinate for the optical axis LBO1 1551OL at the output slit location is denoted by XBO1 1581OC; the x-y coordinate for the line LRBO1-IP % 1581RL at the output slit location is denoted by XRBO1-IP % 1581RC; the x-y coordinate for the line LLBO1-IP % 1551LL at the output slit location is denoted by XLBO1-IP % 1581LC. The beam width at the output slit location is denoted by WBO1-IP % 1581W and is called the “beam waist width of the slit”.
Factors Affecting the Output Spectral Resolution Bandwidth.
As is well known to those skilled in the art, the resolution of the spectrometer increases with decreasing first input slit width WI1 1291W. The imaging through the curved grating requires the width of the output slit, such as the width of the first output slit WO1 1491W, to be chosen appropriately to minimize the wavelength resolution there. Let this wavelength resolution at output slit SLO1 be denoted by ΔλRes-I1-O1 (called the “first output slit spectral resolution bandwidth for beam from the first input slit” or simply as “first output slit spectral resolution bandwidth” when the context is clear which input slit the beam comes from).
It is important to note that ΔλRes-I1-O1 is dependent on: (1) the input slit width, (2) the output slit width, and (3) the grating groove design (the spatial aberration of the focusing beam can be caused by the curved grating's groove design). For the typical curved grating design, especially the usual Rowland curved grating design, the input and output slit widths, WI1 1291W and WO1 1491W are about equal.
Spectral Resolution Bandwidth.
Let PMI1-O1(λI1) be the output optical power at output slit SLO1 when the input beam from input slit SLI1 is a monochromatic beam (denoted by the subscript “M” in PMI1-O1(λI1)) with wavelength λI1. Let ΔI1-Ppk be the peak wavelength λ at which PMI1-O1(λ) is maximum in value when λ=λI1-Ppk. Let ΔLg-I1-P=0.5 be the long wavelength side with respect to λI1-Ipk with λLg-I1-P=0.5>λI1-pk at which PMI1-O1(λLg-I1-P=0.5) drops to 0.5=50% of its peak power so that PMI1-O1(λLg-I1-P=0.5)=0.5*PMI1-O1(λI1-pk). Let λSt-I1-P=0.5 be the short wavelength side with respect to λI1-Ppk with λSt-I1-P=0.5<λI1-pk at which PMI1-O1(λI1) drops to 0.5=50% of its peak power so that PMI1-O1(λSt-I1-P=0.5)=0.5*PMI1-O1(λI1-pk). As shown in
Input and Output Waveguides as Input and Output Slits.
When there is a channel waveguide defining the input or output slit as shown by
The output slit SLO1 1401 location is typically (though not always as explained below) approximately defined by a waveguide mouth acting as an output slit and will be denoted in the same way as the slit as SLO1 1401 beyond which (towards the grating direction) the channel waveguide terminates and a planar waveguiding region, region GPR 1020, starts. The physical width of the output waveguide mouth at the termination point is waveguide mouth width MWO1 1491MW, defined by the width of its waveguide core WGWO1 1991W at the waveguide mouth location. In general, this width MWO1 1491MW may not be the same as the slit width WO1 1491W, but is typically quite close to WO1 1491W for the case where the refractive index contrast between the waveguide core and two waveguide cladding regions to the right and left of the waveguide core is large. The coordinate location of the middle of the output waveguide mouth MSLO1 1401M is MXO1 1491MOC.
Let the cross-section of the input channel waveguide WGI1 1701 along A-A′ of
Let the cross-section of the output channel waveguide WGO1 1901 along B-B′ of
Let the cross-section of the planar waveguiding region, region GPR 1020's, along C-C′ of
In many situations (though not always), the channel and planar waveguiding regions are approximately equal so that npIco 1040O is approximately equal to nchcO1l 1711O, nTpIcd 1040T is approximately equal to nTchcdI1 1711T, and nBpIcd 1040B is approximately equal to nBchcdI1 1711B. Also, typically (though not always) the refractive indices for all the input channel waveguides and output channel waveguide are approximately equal to each other.
The waveguide at close to the mouth can take on shape of constant width or can be tapering in width with linear shape or an arbitrary curvilinear shape, including different types such as up taper (becoming wider at the waveguide exit mouth towards the grating), down taper (becoming narrower at the waveguide exit mouth towards the grating) as shown in
As is known to those skilled in the art, a beam in a waveguide is “clearly guided” when the phase front of the beam is a plane or flat phase front. If the beam is clearly guided all the way to the physical input mouth location MXI1 1291MOC of the input channel waveguide mouth MSLI1 1201M (where the waveguide terminates), then the physical mouth location MXI1 1291MOC of the input waveguide mouth MSLI1 1201M becomes the slit location XI1 1291OC. At this location, the input beam will have a plane phase front with a certain beam width MWBI1-IP % 1181MW, then the beam width MWBI1-IP % 1181MW of the input waveguide mouth MSLI1 1201M becomes the equivalent beam width WBI1-IP % 1181W of an equivalent slit SLI1 1201 at XI1 1291OC with slit width WI1 1291W.
After the beam propagates out of the waveguide mouth MSLI1 1201M, its phase front will begin to become curved in the lateral direction (i.e. for direction within the plane of the planar waveguide) when the beam propagates into the planar waveguiding region, region GPR 1020, due to optical diffraction for a freely propagating (i.e. unguided) beam (the beam becomes unguided in the direction within the plane (i.e. the x-y plane for the x-y-z Cartesian coordinate system defined above) though it is still guided in the direction perpendicular to the plane (i.e. the z direction) of the planar waveguide). This location for the beam is also called the “beam waist” of the beam as is known to those skilled in the art.
As is known to those skilled in the art, a beam in an input tapering waveguide region TWGI1 1701T may not be “clearly guided” when the taper is fast or when the waveguide width changes rapidly within a short distance, as in that case the phase front of the beam would not be a plane or flat phase front and would attain a beam phase front radius of curvature that is finite (plane or flat phase front corresponds to an infinite radius of curvature). In that case, based on the wave propagation in the planar waveguiding region, region GPR 1020, as is well known to those skilled in the art, it is possible to approximately fit the propagating wave (in wavefront and intensity profile) in the grating planar waveguiding region GPR 1020 (the wave-fronts indicated with “X” in case (iii) shown in
Output Case
Similarly for the output waveguide, except that we shall think of each guided mode of the output waveguide and think of the reverse process in which a beam is launched into a particular mode of the output waveguide and the mode is propagating towards the grating, like the input waveguide case discussed. Then the various definitions for the input waveguide can be used for the output waveguides as well.
If the beam is clearly guided all the way to the physical output mouth location MXO1 1491MOC of the output channel waveguide mouth MSLO1 1401M (where the waveguide terminates), then the physical mouth location MXO1 1491MOC of the output waveguide mouth MSLO1 1401M becomes the slit location XO1 1491OC. At this location, the output beam will have a plane phase front with a certain beam width MWBO1-IP % 1581MW, then the beam width MWBO1-IP % 1581MW of the output waveguide mouth MSLO1 1401M becomes the equivalent beam width WBO1-IP % 1581W of an equivalent slit SLO1 1401 at XO1 1491OC with slit width WO1 1491W.
After the beam propagates out of the waveguide mouth MSLO1 1401M, its phase front will begin to become curved in the lateral direction (i.e. for direction within the plane of the planar waveguide) when the beam propagates into the planar waveguiding region, region GPR 1020, due to optical diffraction for a freely propagating (i.e. unguided) beam (the beam becomes unguided in the direction within the plane (i.e. the x-y plane for the x-y-z Cartesian coordinate system defined above) though it is still guided in the direction perpendicular to the plane (i.e. the z direction) of the planar waveguide). This location for the beam is also called the “beam waist” of the beam as is known to those skilled in the art.
As is known to those skilled in the art, a beam in an output tapering waveguide region TWGO1 1901T may not be “clearly guided” when the taper is fast or when the waveguide width changes rapidly within a short distance, as in that case the phase front of the beam would not be a plane or flat phase front and would attain a beam phase front radius of curvature that is finite (plane or flat phase front corresponds to an infinite radius of curvature). In that case, based on the wave propagation in the planar waveguiding region, region GPR 1020, as is well known to those skilled in the art, it is possible to approximately fit the propagating wave (in wavefront and intensity profile) in the grating planar waveguiding region GPR 1020 (the wave-fronts indicated with “X” in case (iv) shown in
Equivalent “Input or Output Slit Location and Slit Width” for Channel Waveguiding Case.
The equivalence between the input or output slit and input and output waveguide parameters would be of interest when the location of the input or output slit is important and the diffraction angle of the beam is important. The width of the input or output slit mainly affects the beam diffraction angle. There are situations in which the detailed intensity profile of the input beam can affect certain performances of the spectrometer at the output slit. In those situations, the waveguide may generate different intensity profile that cannot be well matched by a uniform intensity across the slit for the purpose involved. This invention includes the use of slit as well as the use of waveguide to generate their respective input intensity profiles. When a waveguide is referred to, the waveguide includes waveguides with straight waveguide mouth, tapering waveguide mouth, and waveguide mouth with arbitrary refractive index variation of the core and cladding materials at the waveguide mouth.
For the case of an input or output waveguide that is a strongly guiding channel waveguide in the x-y plane (i.e. a waveguide with high refractive index contrast between the waveguide core region and the waveguide cladding region in the plane of the planar waveguide), if the beam is “clearly guiding” at the mouth, then the slit location is well approximated by the physical location of the mouth and the two edges of the slit are well approximated by the two edges of the waveguide mouth.
However, if the beam is “not clearly guiding”, “not strongly guiding”, or “not guiding” at the mouth (e.g. when its phase front is curved), then the input or output slit location and slit width are taken to be those that will produce a propagating beam that can well approximate the actual beam from the waveguide mouth in terms of the beam width, beam diffraction angle, and beam intensity variation.
In either case, the slit location is well approximated by the “virtual beam waist” location and the slit width is well approximated by the width of the slit that will give a beam at the slit that matches the beam at the virtual beam waist in terms of beam intensity width and beam intensity profile. In the case the beam is clearly guiding, the “virtual beam waist” is then given by the “actual beam waist” at the waveguide mouth.
The terms input slit and input waveguide mouth, input slit width and input waveguide mouth width are used interchangeably. When there is an ambiguity, the input waveguide mouth location and width are understood to be the location and width of the “equivalent input slit” as defined above and not the physical location and width of the actual physical waveguide mouth involved.
In short, for the input it is typically a good approximation to take the equivalent slit location XI1 1291OC for an equivalent input slit SLI1 1201 as the “virtual beam waist location” TWXI1 1291TWOC for an input waveguide TWGI1 1701T, and take the equivalent slit physical width WI1 1291W for an equivalent input slit SLI1 1201 as the slit physical width that will produce the width of a beam waist WBI1-IP % 1181W that is about equal to the “virtual beam waist width” TWWBI1-IP % 1181TWW (i.e. WBI1-IP % 1181W˜TWWB1-IP % 1181TWW).
For the output it is also typically a good approximation to take the equivalent slit location XO1 1491TOC for an equivalent output slit SL01 1401 as the “virtual beam waist location” TWXO1 1491TMOC for an output waveguide TWG01 1901T, and take the equivalent slit physical width WO1 1491W for an equivalent output slit SL01 1401 as the slit physical width that will produce the width of a beam waist WBO1-IP % 1581W that is about equal to the “virtual beam waist width” TWWBO1-IP % 1581TWW (i.e. WBO1-IP % 1581W˜TWWBO1-IP % 1581TWW).
As is well known to those skilled in the art. The above approximation methods are accurate to better than plus-minus 50%. Mouth width design that falls within plus-minus 50% of the design width obtained using the above descriptions gives similar functionalities and is incorporated as inclusive in the embodiments of the present invention.
Optimal Output Slit/Waveguide Design.
Typically, a good optimal output slit design is to first find the output focused beam waist location XBI1-O1 1391OC and place the output slit SLO1 1401 location XO1 1491OC close to it (i.e. XO1 1491OC˜XBI1-O1 1391OC), and the slit width is such that the beam waist width of the slit WBO1-IP % 1581W matches beam waist width of the output beam (given a monochromatic input beam) WBI1-O1-IP % 1391W (i.e. WBO1-IP % 1581W˜WBI1-O1-IP % 1391W).
Below, we will not specifically distinguish or “label” waveguide situations, and will simply use the slit location and width, with the understanding that they can represent the waveguide situations as well based on the equivalent width and position approach discussed above.
A Method of Generating the Grating
First, referring back to
Second, the location PXO1 1491O of output slit SLO1 (or waveguide or photodetector) can be adjusted in order to have the best performance for a particular design goal. Thus, the location PXO1 1491O of output slit SLO1 (or waveguide or photodetector) 1401, specified by the output angle θO1 1471 with respect to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N and the distance SO1 1461 from the grating center is not necessarily on the same circle where entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) 1201 is located.
Third, the relation between θI1 1271, θO1 1471, and the initial groove parameter d is given by the approximate grating formula (valid at “far field) as is known to those skilled in the art,
d*(Sin(θO1)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O1/ngr (13),
where m is the diffraction order and λI1-O1 1321 is the wavelength that will be diffracted by the grating to the output slit SL01 1401. The medium in which the light propagates in can be air or a material medium with an effective refractive index of propagation “n”. In the case of free space, “n” is the material refractive index. In the case of a planar waveguide, “ngr” is the effective refractive index of propagation within the planar waveguide.
Note that Eq. (13) primarily gives the output wavelength λI1-O1/ngr which is the wavelength diffracted to the output slit SLO1 1401 from input slit SLI1 1201 in the material of refractive index n, when given the grating order m, based on a grating parameter “d” that can be interpreted as the approximate distance between any two adjacent groove at the grating center.
Fourth, a choice of the initial groove positions are made. In a preferred embodiment, they are X1=(−d/2, 0) and X−1=(−d/2, 0), or alternatively X1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) and X−1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) (so that X1 and X−1 will be exactly on the input circle IC 1080). With these position vectors, the two initial grooves are located on line forming the tangent LGCT 1050T to the grating center curve LGCC 1050CV that is approximately perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N and have the initial groove spacing of d at the grating center.
In another embodiment, they are X0=(0,0), X1=(d, R−(R2−d2)1/2) and X−1=(−d, R−(R2−d2)1/2). With these position vectors, three initial grooves are located on a circle radius R, have the initial groove spacing of d at the grating center, and has a tangent LGCT 1050T to the grating-center curve LGCC 1050CV that is approximately perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N and have the initial groove spacing of d at the grating center. While this embodiment is an acceptable alternative, it is not generally a preferred alternative as it is particularly good only if the output slit is located close to the input circle IC 1080 or the Rowland circle with a radius R/2 (the three grooves will give a focus of the output beam at close to the input circle. While other grooves to be generated will give focus at any output slit point off the input circle, there will be aberration (i.e. deviation of the focusing points) from these initial three grooves that will give focus only at close to the input circle).
Fifth, the locations of other grooves Xi's are obtained by two conditions. The first of these conditions being that the path-difference between adjacent grooves should be an integral multiple of the wavelength in the medium. The first condition can be expressed mathematically by:
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xja)])=m*λI1-O1A/ngr, (14)
Where as shown in
The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i” so that Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=Xi+1 for i<0 (so ja=−|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). This is only an illustration as there can be situations, for example, the initial grooves may not be at the grating center. Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja. This mathematical expression is numerically exact for the optical path difference requirement in the diffraction grating and is actively adjusted for every groove on HR-CCG.
The second of these conditions being specific for a particular design goal of a curved-grating spectrometer. The second condition in general can be mathematically expressed as
f(Xi)=constant (15)
where Eq. (15) can be depending on other design parameters such as the input slit and output slit positions or the positions of the adjacent grooves (e.g. θI1,SI1,θO1,SO1, λI1-O1, m, ngr, {Xi}) that are already known and hence can be treated as part of the constant. (e.g. θI1,SI1,θO1,SO1, λI1-O1, m, ngr, {Xi}) that are already known and hence can be treated as part of the constant. The positions {Xi} represent the location positions of some grating teeth that are already known. The functional variable involved is Xi which is the variable to be solved. Specific examples of the second condition are described later in the application. The unknown variables in both equations Eq. (14) and Eq. (15) are x- and y-coordinates of the location vector Xi of the i-th groove. For a given input-slit (or input-waveguide) location (θI1, SI1), output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) location (θO1, SO1), and the previous, i.e., ja-th, groove position Xja, Xi is completely specified by equations Eq. (14) and Eq. (15) for a given wavelength λI1-O1 to output slit SLO1, effective refractive index of propagation ngr, and the diffraction order m.
The above two equations Eq. (14) and Eq. (15) are needed to solve for the two unknown numbers in Xi=(xi, yi), namely x-coordinate xi and y-coordinate yi of the ith groove. These two equations are solved analytically, numerically, or computationally for the values of Xi=(xi, yi) using equations solving methods that are already known to those skilled in the art. The groove positions Xi starting from i=0, 1, 2 . . . or i=0, −1, −2 . . . are iteratively solved with the groove location of the preceding groove Xja already solved or specified starting from the location of initial groove X0=(0,0) or X1 or X−1, or any other initial groove position, whichever is applicable.
The last of the HR-CCG specification, namely the Fifth step, ensures that every ray from each groove focuses to a single point. This ensures the rays from HR-CCG will focus at output slit SLO1 with minimal spatial focusing aberration, and therefore enabling a small focused spot size at the output slit.
Other Choices of Initial Grooves.
Note that Eq.(13) is an approximate formula assuming the distance between two adjacent grooves at near the grating center is approximately “d” and the line joining the two grooves are perpendicular to the designated grating normal line. It becomes exact only with far-field approximation, which is valid only when SI1 1261 and SO1 1461 are much larger than d or when the grating is large in size comparing to d.
The more exact form is the same as Eq. (14) by taking two adjacent grooves at the grating center such as i=1 and ja=0 groove giving:
[D1(θI1,SI1,X1)+D2(θO1,SO1,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X0)+D2(θO1,SO1,X0)]=m*λI1-O1/ngr, (16)
Specifically, Eq.(13) can be replaced by Eq. (16) with the distance between X0 and X1 set to be equal to approximately equal to “d” (e.g. X0=(0,0), X1=(d, 0), or alternatively X0=(0,0), X1=(d, R−(R2−d2)1/2)), and with the input slit location (i.e. θI1,SI1) given and the output slit location (i.e. θO1,SO1) given, Eq.(16) can be used to solve for λI1-O1 (with m chosen and ngr given), or alternatively when given λI1-O1 can be used to solve for θO1, (with m chosen and ngr given, and SO1 given (or SO1 taken to be long such as infinity)). These will be just like what Eq. (13) would do but without the need for far field approximation. Note that alternatively we can symmetrically choose the center two grooves to be at X−1 and X1 with X−1 and X1 spaced at d/2 away from the origin X0 (i.e. with X1=(−d/2, 0) and X−1=(−d/2, 0) or alternatively, X1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) and X−1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2). In that case X0 will not be used as a groove location though it is the center (or origin) of the coordinate center.
It is easy to show that if X0 and X1 are given as above (e.g. X0=(0,0), Xi=(d, 0)), then approximately: D1(θI1,SI1, X1)−D1(θI1,SI1, X0)˜d*Sin(θI1) and approximately: D2(θO1,SO1, X1)−D2(θO1,SO1, X0)˜d*Sin(θO1). Thus Eq.(16) can be reduced to Eq. (13) that d*(Sin(θO1)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O1/ngr.
Thus, the use of Eq.(13) is not for the purpose of grating structural design limitation as various other equations can be used to achieve similar goal. In particular, it shall not be used to limit the grating design as the grating design and performances are largely defined by majority of the rest of the grating grooves. Its use is merely to estimate the output wavelength λI1-O1/ngr which is the wavelength in the planar waveguiding material diffracted to the output slit SLO1 1401 from input slit SLI1 1201 in the material of refractive index ngr, when given the grating order m. While a target grating parameter “d” that can be interpreted as the approximate distance between any two adjacent groove at the grating center is useful for the estimation, it is not an essential result.
To put it simply, there is only one initial groove location needed to generate the other grating grooves utilizing Eqs. (14) and (15). The specification of two initial grooves such as the one given by X1=(−d/2, 0) and X−1=(−d/2, 0) (or alternatively X1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) and X−1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2)), ensures that the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N will indeed be approximately perpendicular to the tangent line LGCT 1050T to the grating-center curve LGCC 1050CV. That means the “actual” grating center tangent normal line LGCTN 1050TN (that by definition perpendicular to the tangent LGCT 1050T) is coincided with the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N. Otherwise they do not coincide. The grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N is what the initial input slit angle θI1 1271 and output slit angle θO1 1471 are defined based on. However, if the new “actual” grating center tangent normal line LGCTN 1050TN does not coincide with the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N, then by right the input angle and output angle in Eq. (14) for example, shall be given by θI1′ 1271TNA and θO1′ 1471TNA instead of by θI1 1271 and θO1 1471 (θI1′ 1271TNA and θO1′ 1471TNA are angles based on the grating center tangent normal line LGCTN 1050TN).
The specification of three initial grooves is thus overdone but is some time used. When the third initial groove is specified rather than having the third groove computed using Eqs. (14) and (15), it sometime may generate small amount of aberration as it may not be consistent with the rest of the grating groove that are generated using Eqs. (14) and (15).
Other Alternatives to the Third Step.
The essential function of Third Step is to pick or designate output free-space wavelength λI1-O1 1321 and grating order m, and when possible, also make sure the grating-center curve LGCC 1050CV for the initial few grooves has a tangent LGCT 1050T that is perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N. The λI1-O1 1321 and grating order m can then be used in step Five to generate all other grooves by starting from just one grating center groove.
In an embodiment, for the purpose of illustration and not limitation, we can specify the grating center groove X0 1600O as the only initial groove, and λI1-O1 1321 and grating order m are arbitrarily chosen. In that case, it is convenient to let X0 1600O to be the coordinate origin X0=(0,0). The grooves positions are thus essentially all given by step Five, which then ensures that the grating design resulted will give diffract light to output slit SLO1 1401 from input slit SLI1 1201 at wavelength λI1-O1 1321 with aberration-free focusing at output slit SLO1 1401, even for a large grating angle span. The actual distances or spacing between two adjacent grooves generated is automatically determined and we may label it as “d” at near the grating center, which may be substantially deviating from d at far from the grating center.
For example, X0 1600O can serve as the previous groove position for X1 1601P and X−1 1601N and the rest of the grating grooves can be generated from there by using Eq. (14) and (15) in the Fifth Step. For example, if Eq.(15) is the constant arc case, then the arc length choice becomes a variable of Eq. (15), which will result in certain distance “d” between X0 and X1. This procedure, while can be adopted, however, does not ensure the grating-center curve LGCC 1050CV for the initial few grooves has a tangent LGCT 1050T that is perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N.
Flexibility in Choosing Initial Grooves.
There are various other possible specifications of the initial groove positions that can be made. For example, instead if three initial grooves or one initial groove, the initial grooves can also be chosen to be only two grooves at X1=(d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) and X−1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) and there is no groove at X0. Alternatively, we can also specify X1=(d/2, 0) and X−1=(−d/2, 0) and there is no groove at X0, which is just a shift in the “y” coordinate by the amount R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2 and is mounting to a redefinition of the distance to the input or the output slits. This procedure does ensure the grating-center curve LGCC 1050CV for the initial few grooves has a tangent LGCT 1050T that is perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N.
Arbitrary Reference for the Input and Output Angles.
It is important to note that in the general situation where Eq.(13) (or the more exact Eq. (16)) is not used to generate the grating with either the initial two points or three points as described above, then after the grating is generated, there is no guarantee that the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N is perpendicular to the grating-center tangent line LGCT 1050T to the resulted grating-center curve LGCC 1050CV at the grating center CGC 1050.
If the grating generated produces a tangent line LGCT 1050T that is not perpendicular to grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N (which is used to define angle θI1 1271), it will just amount to an offset of the angle θI1 1271 with respect to an “actual normal line” that is actually perpendicular to the tangent line LGCT 1050T. That means the “normal line” LGCCN 1050N used is rotated by an angle, say ΔθI1, from this “actual normal line”. With respect to this actual normal line, the value of the input angle θI1′ will just be given in terms of θI1 by θI1′=θI1+ΔθI1.
In some cases, the initial grooves generated may not fit the equations (e.g. Eqs. (14) and (15)) imposed by step Five above (e.g. for the case of three initial grooves on circle of radius R, they give focusing only at near the input circle IC 1080 or the Rowland circle with a radius R/2) and hence may even give a distortion or deviation from the focusing properties of other grooves (e.g. that could be giving focusing at off the input circle).
Thus, the way the initial grating grooves are chosen shall not be used to limit the grating design as the grating design and performances are largely defined by majority of the rest of the grating grooves and not necessarily the initial few grooves. Thus, variations are allowed in the positions of the grating groove as long as they fall within the domain of “grating-groove variation applicability” discussed next.
Domain of Grating-Groove Variation Applicability.
As is known to those skilled in the art, the grating performances are depending on the collective results of diffraction and wave interference from the majority of the grating grooves. They are not depending on just a few grating grooves. They are also not too sensitive to the grating grooves being moved spatially by an amount δS less than about ½ of an optical wavelength in the material given by λI1-O1/(2*ngr), where δS=(δx2±δy2)0.5 with δx being the spatial deviation from the designed position in the x-coordinate and δy being the spatial deviation from the designed position in the y-coordinate. If the design of a grating groove position in accordance to an embodiment of the present invention is XjDn=(xjDn, yjDn) and another design or implementation or realization of the grating groove is at XjIm=(xjIm, yjIm), then δx=|xjDN−xjIm| and δy=|yjDN−yjIm|. Moreover, two gratings or grating designs or grating implementations or grating realizations can achieve similar output spectral filtering performances for about half or more than half of the filtered spectrum if at least for a collection of grating grooves that are involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location, they are similar in their groove positions to each other in both gratings. Similar grating groove position means δS<λI1-O1/(2*ngr).
While the five steps above is a method of generating the set of positions for all the grating grooves in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, there are other method that could generate the set of positions for all the grating grooves.
Thus, the grating performances will be similar as long as for this collection of the grating grooves (that are involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location), the deviation denoted by δS of each grating groove position from the designed values is less than about half of the wavelength in the material so that δS<λI1-O1/(2*ngr).
Obviously, smaller deviation (e.g. δS<λI1-O1/(4*ngr) or δS<λI1-O1/(10*ngr) or a larger set of grooves involved (e.g. the set of grooves involve in over 70% of the grating total power reflection instead of 50%, or the set of grooves involve in over 90% of the grating total power reflection instead of 50%) will ensure even closer performances to the desired design. These allowed deviations (e.g. a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1/(2*ngr)) describe the maximum deviations allowed. When two gratings meet such conditions, we will consider them to be the same design within the allowances of design variations for the purpose of this invention. The minimal of which is given by same design condition (A): two gratings are considered the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1/(2*ngr); a tighter one is given by same design condition (B): two gratings are considered the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1/(4*ngr); another tighter one is given by same design condition (C): two gratings are considered the same design if a set of grooves involve in over 70% if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 70% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1/(10*ngr). As yet another tighter one is given by same design condition (D): two gratings are considered the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 90% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1/(10*ngr). The applicability of which is depending on grating applications. For example, for the usual spectral analysis application, same-design-conditions (A) and (B) is applicable, for the DWDM (dense wavelength division multiplexing) wavelength channel filtering applications in fiber-optic communications, same-design-conditions (C) and (D) are applicable,
In terms of the performance of the grating design, the grating groove positions are what are important and not the method of generating those positions. Thus, in terms of the specification of the grating structure in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the method of obtaining the grating groove position is for the purpose of illustration and not limitation. In terms of the method of obtaining the grating structure in accordance to another embodiment of the present invention, the steps of obtaining the grating structure are important.
Independence on the Choice of Initial Groove as Coordinate Origin.
It is important to note that the choice of X0=(0,0) to be the coordinate origin or not should not materially alter the grating design as the choice of reference coordinate system is arbitrary. The choice of a reference coordinate system is only used as a language or reference to describe the locations of all the groove points. As is well known to those skill in the art, other coordinate systems and references can be used as there is always a way to describe the same set of groove points in terms of another coordinate system.
Constant Angle Geometry
An exemplary embodiment of HR-CCG specified above is shown in
where XI1=(−SI1*Sin(θI1), SI1*Cos(θI1)) 13-1291OC is the position vector of input or entrance slit SLI1 13-1201, XO1=(−SO1*Sin(θO1), SO1*Cos(θO1)) 13-1491OC is the position vector of output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 13-1401, Xi 13-160|i|P/N (N if i<0 and P if i>0) is the position of a groove i, and Δθi 13-163|i|P/N (163|i|N if i<0 or 1603|i|P (if i>0) is the difference in angular position between successive ith and jath grooves (e.g. ja is the groove that precedes groove i (closer to grating center) so that |ja|=(|i|−1)). Position Xja is typically already known or solved. In Eq. 17, operator “·” means the inner product in vector analysis and defined as A·B≡|A|*|B|*Cos(θ). The vertical bar “|” indicates taking the absolute value or the length of a vector. Equivalently, Eq.(17) can be written as:
Because |Δθi| is constant for all grooves, it is same as the angular position difference between the center groove at X0 13-1601 and the first groove at X1 13-1601P, i.e.
In this particular case, the position of entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 13-1201 exit slit or output slit (or waveguide) SLO1 13-1401 and the angular spacing between the grooves are XI1=(−23.49, 16.45) 13-1291OC, XO1=(−17.26, 33.46) 13-1491OC, and Δθi=Δθ1=4.13° 13-1611P. In this example, wave-front of the diverging input beam propagating toward the curved grating is sliced into a set of narrow beams with angular extension Δθ by the curved-grating. Each beam with angular extension Δθ undergoes reflective diffraction by each groove. At a particular wavelength, grating diffraction at a particular groove is equivalent to redirecting a particular narrow beam to an output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 13-1401 location with θO1 13-1471, basically due to constructive interference of electro-magnetic waves reflected from adjacent grating grooves. In geometrical optics, it is regarded as due to constructive interference of rays or beams reflected from adjacent grating grooves. The geometrical optic picture is physically less precise but gives reasonable results in predicting the direction of the output beam due to grating diffraction. The position vectors Xi's calculated from Eq. (2) and Eq. (4) are listed in the Table 2. As shown in
The above example has been used for illustration purposes only and should not be construed in any way as limiting the scope of the invention.
Constant Angle with One or Plurality of Outputs on Input Circle or Rowland Circle
Due to the imaging property of curved grating surfaces as shown by Rowland, when the spectrometer is constructed so that the input slit is on a circle called the input circle IC 1080 or the Rowland circle with a radius R/2 which is half the radius of curvature of the grating-center curve, the output focusing point for a particular wavelength will be approximately on the input circle or Rowland circle.
The current invention includes the situations in which one or more than one (i.e. plurality) of output slits are placed along an output plane, each slit placed along a particular output angle to detect a particular wavelength of light, and light at that wavelength is focused (i.e. is achieving its minimal beam width) at the location of that output slit. The output plane is called the focusing field.
When the first output slit is placed on the input circle IC 1080 or the Rowland circle with a radius R/2, as noted about, the property of the imaging of the curved grating surface will result in an output plane or focusing field that is curved and in fact approximately along the input circle or Rowland circle.
This in another alternative embodiment, High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating has a constant angle and output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 present on the circle of radius R/2. In this embodiment, each groove surface has an angular extension (Δθ)i from entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1. In this example, the angular extensions (Δθ)i are kept constant for all grooves. In addition, both entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 and output slits (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 are located on or near a circle of radius R/2, where R is the radius of a circle formed by three initial groove locations X0, X1, and X−1.
Constant Angle with One or Plurality of Outputs on Arbitrary Locations
In as yet another alternate embodiment, High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating has a constant angle with output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 present at an arbitrary location, as shown by
Various Curvilinear Shapes for the Groove Surfaces.
There are two commonly used shapes of grooves in the grating used in the free-space spectrometer. They are straight line and sinusoidal shape. These two shapes are widely used because of ease of manufacturing process. In an embodiment of the present invention, for a curved-grating, ideal shape of reflecting surface is not a straight line, but a curved shape that can image entrance slit or input slit (or input waveguide mouth) SLI1 1205 at output slit (or output waveguide mouth or photodetector) SLO1 1405 location. Ideal aberration-free curved mirror is an ellipse with its focal point located at source and image. Therefore, as shown in
This, in another embodiment to be described next, elliptical shape is used for each groove as just described above.
Constant Arc Case
The geometrical specification of the HR-CCG with constant arc-length (the Constant-Arc Case) and output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 is as described below.
First, refer to
Second, the location of output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 1401 can be adjusted in order to have the best performance for a particular design goal. Thus, the location of output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) XO1 1491OC, specified by the angle θO1 1471 with respect to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N and the distance SO1 of 1461 from the grating center CGC 1050 is not necessarily on the same circle where entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 1201 is located.
Third, the relation between θI1 1271, θO1 1471, and the initial groove spacing d is given by the grating formula d*(Sin(θO1)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O1/ngr where m is the diffraction order, ngr is the effective refractive index of propagation of the medium, and λI1-O1 is an operation wavelength.
Fourth, initial groove positions are X1=(d, 0) 1601P and X−1=(−d, 0) 1601N, or alternatively X1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) and X−1=(−d/2, R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) (so that X1 and X−1 will be exactly on the input circle IC 1080). With these position vectors, two initial grooves are located on a circle of radius R and have the initial groove spacing of d at the grating center. This circle segment of radius R at the grating center then forms the grating-center curve.
Fifth, the location of other grooves Xi's 160|i|P/N (N if i<0 and P if i>0) are obtained by the following two conditions. The first condition being the path-difference between adjacent grooves should be an integral multiple of the wavelength in the medium, which is mathematically expressed as
[D1(θI1,SI1,X1)+D2(θO1,SO1,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X0)+D2(θO1,SO1,X0)]=m*λI1-O1/ngr, (20)
The second condition being the arc lengths of all the grooves are the same throughout the HR-CCG. This second condition can be mathematically expressed as:
where ΔSi is the arc-length of the ith groove. Suppose Xi−1 is already known, this equation requires the knowledge of Xi+1, which is still unknown. However, with the constraint of the fact that each Xi is located at the center of the groove, the above expression can be reduced to the following expression without Xi+1.
Or equivalently:
where Xja is the position of a groove ja that is adjacent to groove i (e.g., ja can be i−1 or i+1). Typically Xja is already known.
Constant Arc with Output Slits on Rowland Circle
For the purpose of illustration and not limitation,
The above example has been for illustration purposes only and should not in any way be limiting the scope of the above-described embodiment or invention as a whole.
The performance of the HR-CCG with the constant arc-length and output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) on a tangent circle is compared with a Rowland design with the same parameters such as θI1, SI1, θO1, SO1, R, m, d, and λI1-O1. It is a direct comparison of a Rowland curved-grating spectrometer described in
In another embodiment to be described next, elliptical shape is used for each groove, and the length of this elliptical shape in each groove is kept constant (constant arc). Center positions of the grooves Xi's in this example are determined so that the length of each elliptical groove is the same.
Constant Arc with Outputs Near a Straight Line or Near Flat Field Output Case
Due to the imaging property of curved grating surfaces as shown by Rowland, when the spectrometer is constructed so that the input slit is on a circle called the input circle IC 1080 or the Rowland circle with a radius R/2 that has a radius which is half the radius of curvature of the grating-center curve, the output focusing point for a particular wavelength will be approximately on the input circle or Rowland circle.
The current invention includes the situations in which one or more than one (i.e. plurality) of output slits are placed along an output plane, each slit placed along a particular output angle to detect a particular wavelength of light, and light at that wavelength is focused (i.e. is achieving its minimal beam width) at the location of that output slit. The output plane is called the focusing field.
When the first output slit is placed on the input circle or Rowland circle, as noted above, the property of the imaging of the curved grating surface will result in an output plane or focusing field that is curved and in fact approximately along the input circle IC 1080 or Rowland circle. In some application situations, such curved output plane or output focusing field is undesirable.
In some application situations, it is desirable that the output plane is closed to being a straight line. In that situation we will refer to the spectrometer as a “Flat Field” spectrometer.
In another embodiment, High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating has a constant arc with the first output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) being present not on the input circle IC 1080 or Rowland circle but along a straight line that passes through the input slit on one end and the output slit on the other end, and the line is approximately perpendicular to the grating center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N. With reference to
In as yet another embodiment, the grating is the “constant arc design” mentioned above. Furthermore, there are plurality of output slits, in which each output slit is placed along a particular output angle to detect a particular wavelength of light, and the plurality of the output slits are placed close to the “input-slit CPD line”.
It can be shown that for grating with “constant arc design”, for an output slit placed at particular output angle to detect a particular wavelength of light, light at that wavelength will be focused near the “input-slit CPD line”. This is a useful property of the “constant arc design”.
Such “flat field” output is useful for example, when the input waveguide or slit is small and the input beam diffraction divergence angle is large. This also means the converging or focusing beam onto the output waveguides or slits will also have large angle. The flat field means that the output waveguide mouth (or slit) of one channel will not block the large angle converging beam that reach the adjacent output channel waveguide (or slit).
Constant Arc with Arbitrary Output Locations
In another alternate embodiment, High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating has a constant arc with an output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1 or plurality of output slits present at arbitrary locations.
Grating Groove Near or on Outer Rowland Circle
In as yet another alternate embodiment, High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating has grooves lying on or near the circle of radius R (the near-Outer-Rowland Case) where R is the radius of a circle formed by three initial groove locations X0, X1, and X2. The output slit SLO1 can be located at anywhere, including but not limited to the input circle IC 1080 or Rowland circle, as depicted in
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO1,SO1,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO1,SO1,Xja)])=m*λI1-O1/ngr, (24A)
where the groove “i” is next to some groove ja. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i” so that Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=X1+1 for i<0 (so ja=−|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). This is only an illustration as there can be situations, for example, the initial grooves may not be at the grating center. Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja.
Secondly, the angular locations of the grooves are chosen so that each groove is located at or near the circle of radius R throughout the HR-CCG, where R is the radius of a circle formed by three initial groove locations X0, X1, and X−1.
In another alternate embodiment, the High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating with grooves on or near the circle of radius R or the outer input circle 1070 (the near-Rowland case) has one or plurality of output slits (or waveguides or photodetectors) present at arbitrary locations.
Grating Groove Near or on Outer Elliptical Curve
In as yet another alternate embodiment, High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating has grooves lying on or near an elliptical curve that has a radius of curvature R (the near-Ellipse Case) at or near the grating center, where R/2 is the radius of the input circle 1080 or Rowland circle that passes through the grating center and the input slit SLI1. The elliptical curve is also part of an ellipse with two foci of the ellipse at the input slit and the “image point” of the input slit. The “image point” of the input slit is obtained by using the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N as the plane of reflection for the input slit point.
The output slit SLO1 can be located on anywhere, including but not limited to the input circle 1080 or Rowland circle (like
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO1,SO1,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO1,SO1,Xja)])=m*λI1-O1/ngr, (24B)
where the groove “i” is next to some groove ja. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i” so that Xja=X1−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=Xi+1 for i<0 (so ja=−|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). This is only an illustration as there can be situations, for example, the initial grooves may not be at the grating center. Sgn(i-ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja.
Secondly, the angular locations of the grooves are chosen so that each groove lies on or near the elliptical curve obtained above throughout the HR-CCG, where R is the radius of a circle formed by three initial groove locations X0, X1, and X−1.
In another alternate embodiment, the High-Resolution Compact Curved Grating with grooves on or near an ellipse (the near-Ellipse case) has one or plurality of output slits (or waveguides or photodetectors) present at arbitrary locations.
Broadband Two Anchor Wavelengths Case
First, the location of the entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) 16-1201 is adjustable in order to have the best performance for a particular design goal. Thus, the location XI1 16-1291OC of an entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) 16-1201 is specified by angle θI1 with respect to a grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 16-1050N and the distance SI1 from curved grating center CGC 1050.
Second, the location of the output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) for two different wavelengths λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A is adjustable in order to have the best performance for a particular design goal. The location XO1A 16-1491AOC of the first output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SLO1A 16-1401A for wavelength λI1-O1A is specified by the angle θO1A 16-1471A with respect to a grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 16-1050N and the distance SO1A 16-1461A from the curved grating center CGC 1050.
The location XO1B 16-1491BOC of the second output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) SL01B 16-1401B for wavelength λI1-O1B is specified by the angle θO1B with respect to a grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050N and the distance SO1B from the curved grating center CGC 1050.
Note that output slit SL01A 16-1401A, and output slit SL02A 16-1402A are not necessarily on the same circle where entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 16-1201 is located.
Third, the relation between θI1, θO1A, θO2A and the initial groove spacing d is given by the grating formula,
d*Sin(θO1A)+Sin(θO1A)=m*λI1-O1A/ngr (25)
d*Sin(θO2A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O2A/ngr (26)
where m is the diffraction order and n is the effective refractive index of propagation of the medium. For example for the purpose of illustration but not limitation, when given the locations of the two anchor output slits, θO1A, θO2A are known, and with m, ngr, and d chosen, Eqs. (25) and (26) can be used to solve for λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A. The values for λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A can then be used in the next step (forth step) to obtain all the grating groove positions starting from a groove at X0.
Fourth, locations of other grooves Xi's are obtained by two conditions. The first of these conditions being that the path-difference between adjacent grooves should be an integral multiple of the wavelength λI1-O1A in the medium. The first condition can be expressed mathematically by:
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xja)])=m*λI1-O1A/ngr, (27)
where the groove “i” is next to some groove ja. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i” so that Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=Xi+1 for i<0 (so ja=−|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). This is only an illustration as there can be situations, for example, the initial grooves may not be at the grating center. Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja.
D1(θI1,SI1,Xi) is the distance from the i-th groove located at Xi to entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) location XI1 16-1291OC specified by θI1 and SI1, D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xi) is the distance from the i-th groove located at Xi to output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) location XO1A 16-1491AOC specified by θO1A and SO1A, m is the diffraction order, and n is the effective refractive index of propagation of the medium. This mathematical expression is numerically exact for the optical path difference requirement in the diffraction grating and is actively adjusted for every groove on HR-CCG.
The second of these conditions being that the path-difference between adjacent grooves should be an integral multiple of the wavelength λI1-O2A in the medium. The second condition can be expressed mathematically by:
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D3(θO2A,SO2A,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D3(θO2A,SO2A,Xja)])=M*λI1-O2A/ngr, (28)
where the groove “i” is next to some groove ja. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i” so that Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=Xi+1 for i<0 (so ja=−|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). This is only an illustration as there can be situations, for example, the initial grooves may not be at the grating center. Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja.
D3(θO2A,SO2A,Xi) is the distance from the i-th groove located at Xi to output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) location XO2A 16-1492AOC specified by θO2A 16-1472A and SO2A 16-1461A. This mathematical expression is numerically exact for the optical path difference requirement in the diffraction grating and is actively adjusted for every groove on HR-CCG. Solving Equations (27) and (28) together, exact locations of other grooves Xi's can be obtained.
Broadband Two Anchor Wavelengths Case with Input Slit and Two Output Slits on a Same Circle with Circle Center Near Grating Center
In an application, such relatively equidistance locations from the grating for the output slits is useful for example, when the input waveguide or slit is small and the input beam diffraction divergence angle is large. This also means the converging or focusing beam onto the output waveguides or slits will also have large angle. The equidistance means that the output waveguide mouth (or slit) of one channel will not block the large angle converging beam that reach the adjacent output channel waveguide (or slit).
In this case, optionally, in some applications one can place a curved reflecting mirror passing through points XO1A 17-1491AOC and XO2A 17-1492AOC, with the nominal direction of the curve at XO1A 17-1491AOC and XO2A 17-1492AOC pointing towards the grating center CGC 17-1050. As light at wavelength λI1-O1A enters entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 17-1201 and is diffracted by the grating towards output slit SLO1A 17-1401A, it will hit the mirror and be reflected back by the mirror along the same path back to the grating and further focusing back to the entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 17-1201. Similarly, as light at wavelength λI1-O2A enters entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 17-1201 and is diffracted by the grating towards output slit SLO2A 17-1402A, it will hit the mirror and be reflected back by the mirror along the same path back to the grating and further focusing back to the entrance slit or input slit (or waveguide) SLI1 17-1201. An application that may make use of this property is when one want to reflected the beam back to the input slit location such as to form an optical cavity in the case of a laser, or to increase the path length of the beam in certain compact spectrometer applications.
Broadband Two Anchor Wavelengths Case with Input Slit and Three or Plurality of the Output Slits Near a Straight Line
In another embodiment, also illustrated by
The three output slit (or waveguide) locations XO1A 17-1491AOC, XO2A 17-1492AOC, XO3 17-14930C, can be made to be located on or near a circle of radius Rout, called the radius of curvature of the output plane or output-plane radius. This circle of radius Rout, can have a center of curvature either closed to or away from the grating center.
In one embodiment, SO1A and SO2A are chosen so that the locations XO1A 17-1491AOC, XO2A 17-1492AOC, XO3 17-14930C lie on a near straight line and Rout is large.
In an application, such relatively equidistance locations from the grating and “flat field” (near straight-line) arrangement for the output slits is useful for example, when the input waveguide or slit is small and the input beam diffraction divergence angle is large. This also means the converging or focusing beam onto the output waveguides or slits will also have large angle. The flat field means that the output waveguide mouth (or slit) of one channel will not block the large angle converging beam that reach the adjacent output channel waveguide (or slit).
Optionally, in some applications, the three focal points can form a nearly flat surface of reflection if a mirror surface 17-905 is placed across the output slit locations, so that the focused beams with plane wavefront at their focal points will be reflected directly back to the entrance slit SLI1 17-1201. In that case, each of the reflected beam will trace back its own original physical beam propagation and hence will achieve maximum reflection back into the input slit or waveguide SLI1 17-1201. An application that may make use of this property is when one want to reflected the beam back to the input slit location such as to form an optical cavity in the case of a laser, or to increase the path length of the beam in certain compact spectrometer applications.
Broadband Two Anchor Wavelengths Case with Input Slit and Plurality of Output Slits on a Same Circle and Mirrors Near Output Slit with Curved Mirror Surface to Match Beam's Phase Front Curvature
As shown in
Broadband Two Anchor Wavelengths Multiple Outputs and Inputs Case
An optical grating spectrometer device that can be used in various devices include but not limited to a wavelength multiplexer, wavelength demultiplexer, optical spectra processing device, or a device in an optical spectrometers, wavelength channel multiplexers, wavelength channel demultiplexers, wavelength or frequency filters, wavelength combiners, wavelength splitters, optical spectrum analyzers, wavelength detectors, spectra dispersion devices, optical arbitrary waveform generators, optical dispersion compensators, optical signal processors, and optical wavelength-domain or frequency-domain processors, for combining, filtering, analyzing, processing, or detecting the spectral compositions of an input optical beam or plurality of input beams, with one or plurality of output beams.
Specifically, the optical grating spectrometer device 18-1000 enabling a processing of light spectra in a range of operation wavelengths centered at wavelength λc. As shown by
The optical grating spectrometer device 18-1000 also comprises at least an output slit SLO1 18-1401 (at position XO1 18-1491OC) or a plurality of output slits, say No number of slits given by {SLO1 18-1401 (at position XO1 18-1491OC), SLO2 18-1402 (at position XO2 18-14920C), SLh3 18-140h (at position XO3 18-1493OC), . . . , and SLONo 18-140No (at position XONo 18-149NoOC)}, and a curved grating CG 18-1010. The curved grating CG 18-1010 for processing the spectral compositions of at least an optical beam BI1 18-1101 that goes through slit SLI1 18-1201. There may be other optical beams Bit 18-1102 that goes through slit SLI2 18-1202, BIk 18-110k that goes through slit SLIk 18-120k, . . . , and BIN 18-110N that goes through slit SLIN 18-120N etc. The grating CG 18-1010 comprises a plurality of grooves at positions X−2, X−1, X0, X1, X2 . . . , the position of each groove being adjustable for controlling a performance of the grating spectrometer, the position of each of the input slits being adjustable for controlling a performance of the of the grating spectrometer, and the position of each of the output slits being adjustable for controlling a performance of the grating spectrometer, are determined as follows:
First: for the purpose of describing the design of the optical grating spectrometer device, a Cartesian coordinate system is set up with vector X=(x,y,z) denoting a spatial point in the coordinate system for which the real number x is the x-coordinate, y is the y-coordinate, and z is the z-coordinate for the vector. The coordinate origin is at vector (0,0,0). The optical beam propagating in the grating system is assumed to be propagating approximately parallel to the two-dimensional x-y plane at z=0. In this plane, it is sufficient to describe the x and y coordinates, and the vector in this plane will be denoted by X=(x,y) with the origin at (0,0).
In the case of applications to a wavelength multiplexer/demutiplexer/spectrometer/spectra-processing-device with freely propagating optics, the grating grooves are a set of planes approximately perpendicular to x-y plane at z=0. The spacing and relative locations of these planes with respect to each other at z=0 can be described by a function that depends on the x and y coordinates. The angular deviation of the optical beam diffracted by the grating is largely in a direction parallel to the x-y plane at z=0.
As is well known to those skilled in the art, the grating still can have a curvilinear surface as a function of z in the z direction but it will be to perform only the regular function of focusing and imaging the optical beam in the z direction and will not have the function of spreading the optical beam in different spatial directions for different frequency components due to the grating grooves. In one embodiment, this focusing function in the z-direction is achieved via curvilinear surface that has an elliptical shape in the z direction with two foci, one focus at the location of the input slit and the other focus at the location of the output slit. In another embodiment, this focusing ellipse is approximated by a circle whose radius of curvature matches the radius of curvature of the said elliptical curve around the z=0 region where most of the energy of the beam is hitting the grating. Thus, the wavelength dispersion functionalities of the grating grooves that depend only on the relative positions and spacing of the parallel lines of the grating grooves with respect to each other in the x and y directions can be described by functions in the x-y plane with two-dimensional coordinates denoted by vector X=(x,y). When the x-y positions of these grating grooves are joined with a line (say at the z=0 plane), they will form a curvilinear line in the two-dimensional x-y plane that describes the grating surface (at near z=0 plane).
When this device is applied as a device in an integrated optic circuit or electronic-photonic integrated circuit, the optical beam in the optical grating spectrometer device will be confined within a planar waveguide with its plane parallel to the z=0 plane. As is known to those skilled in the art, a planar waveguide has a layer or set of layers of materials made up of materials with relatively high refractive indices forming a two-dimensional waveguide core with refractive index npIco 18-1040O (see
Hence, for the purpose of illustration and not limitations, all the grating groove positions and all the positions for the input slits or output slits are described by a “two-dimensional” coordinate system that depends only on the x and y coordinates.
After setting up a two-dimensional coordinate system described by vector X=(x,y) with the coordinate origin at (0,0), the input/output slit positions and the positions of the grating grooves are specified for an optical grating spectrometer device 18-1000 with a curved grating CG 18-1010 as described below. The center for the curved grating called the curved grating center CGC 18-1050 is chosen to be situated at X0 that is set also to be at the coordinate origin so that X0=(0,0) 18-1600O. In this embodiment, the coordinate axes are set up so that the y direction is parallel to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N and the x=0 line coincides with the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N and passes through the grating center GC 18-1050 at X0. Thus, the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N coincides with the line that gives the y-axis.
There is a first input slit SLI1 18-1201 for allowing an entry of an input optical beam BI1 18-1101 into device 18-1000, a location of the first input slit being adjustable, and further the location of the first input slit is specified by a first input angle θI1 18-1271 that is sustained between the line joining the first input slit location XI1 18-1291OC to the grating center CGC 18-1050 and the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N, and further specified by a first input distance SIn1 18-1261 from the curved grating center CGC 18-1050 to the first input slit location XI1 18-1291OC. The width of the first input slit being adjustable, and further the width of the first input slit being specified by a first input slit width WI1 18-1291W. The angle θI1 18-1271 is zero when the line joining the input slit to the grating center is parallel to grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N, takes on positive value when it is rotated about the curved grating center CGC 18-1050 from this zero-angle position towards the negative x direction, and takes on negative value when it is rotated about the grating center from this zero-angle position towards the positive x direction from this zero-angle position. This will be the sign conventions for all the angles below that are referenced to the grating center CGC 18-1050 as the pivot of rotation. In terms of the Cartesian coordinates expressed in angle θI1 18-1271 and distance SI1 18-1261, the input slit SLI1 18-1201 is situated at XI1=(−SI1*Sin(θI1), SI1*Cos(θI1)) 18-1291OC.
Second: a first output slit called the “first anchor output slit” SLO1A 18-1401A for allowing the exiting of a first anchor output optical beam BO1A 18-1301A, is specified. As will be clear below, the output slit of interest SLO1A 18-1401A is referred to as an “anchor output slit” as the position of this output slit SLO1A 18-1401A will be used to obtain the grating groove positions and hence will serve as an “anchor” for the groove positions generation. The location of the first anchor output slit XO1A 18-1491AOC being adjustable, and further the location of the first anchor output slit XO1A 18-1491AOC specified by a first anchor output angle θO1A 18-1471A that is sustained between the line joining the first anchor output slit location XO1A 18-1491AOC to the grating center CGC 18-1050 and the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N, and further specified by a first anchor output distance SO1A 18-1461A from the grating center CGC 18-1050 to the first anchor output slit location XO1A 18-1491AOC. In the subscripts for θO1A 18-1471A and SO1A 18-1461A, “O1A” refers to the first anchor output. The coordinate of the first anchor output slit is denoted by XO1A 18-1491AOC and is given by XO1A=(−SO1A*Sin(θO1A), SO1A*Cos(θO1A)) 18-1491AOC. The width of the first anchor output slit being adjustable, and further the width of the first anchor output slit is being specified by a first anchor output slit width WO1A 18-1491W. Thus, the location of output slit is not necessarily on the Rowland circle; and
Third: the medium in the “grating diffraction region” between any of the input slit and the grating or any of the output slit and the grating, has an effective propagating refractive index around ngr 18-1040 for the input optical beam with spectra compositions around wavelength λBI1 18-1121, as shown in
A grating order is chosen and denoted by “m”, which is an integer (can be positive or negative). A particular optical wavelength of the spectral component of the input beam is chosen to be diffracted to the first anchor output slit SLO1A 18-1201A. The free-space wavelength for this spectral component is denoted by λI1-O1A 18-1321A and its frequency is fI1-O1A=(c/λI1-O1A), where c is the speed of light in vacuum. The value of λI1-O1A 18-1321A (see
Note that this “anchor” output slit may be one of the No output slits specified as {SLO1, . . . , SLONo} or it may be “addition to the No output slits specified as {SLO1, . . . , SLOno}. Such anchor output slits are defined for the purpose of discussion such as to define how the grating is generated, and not limitation in that in the actual implementation, this middle-wavelength output slit does not have to actually physically exist. In any case, it is specifically specified as the “anchor slit” and it carries a subscript “A” to distinguish it from the other output slits whose positions will be determined differently from such “anchor output slits”.
Fourth: The position of the ith groove is specified by its x-y coordinates Xi=(xi, yi) 18-160|i|P/N. Below, 18-160|i|P/N shall be taken as to mean it is given by 18-160|i|N if i<0, 18-160|i|P if i>0, and 18-1600O if i=0. The x-y coordinates are specified with respect to the grating center X0 18-1600O and the input slit XI1 18-1291OC. The angle θgrI1-i 18-161|i|P/N is the angle made by the line joining the input slit location XI1 18-1291OC to the groove location Xi 18-160|i|P/N and the line joining the input slit location XI1 18-1291OC to the grating center X0 18-1600O. Below, 18-161|i|P/N shall be taken as to mean it is given by 18-161|i|N if i<0 and 18-161|i|P if i>0. θgrI1-i 18-161|i|P/N defined above can be used to give the divergence angle span of the input beam intercepted by the grating from the grating groove at i=0 up to groove number i, and may be referred to as the “input-ray angle at groove i”. The value of θgrI1-i 18-161|i|P/N is zero when Xi=X0, is positive when i>0, and is negative when i<0.
Fifth, the locations of all other grooves are given by computing the coordinate of each groove with the ith groove's coordinate Xi 18-160|i|P/N given by the following two conditions. The first of these conditions being that the path-difference between adjacent grooves should be an integral multiple of the wavelength in the medium. The first condition can be expressed mathematically by:
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO1A,SO1,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xja)])=m*λI1-O1A/ngrI1-O1A, (29),
where D1(θI1,SI1,Xi) is the physical distance from an i-th groove located at Xi 18-160|i|P/N to the input slit's (or input waveguide's) SLI1 18-1201 position XI1 18-1291OC specified by θI1 18-1271 and SI1 18-1261, D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xi) is the distance from the i-th groove located at Xi 18-160|i|P/N to the first anchor output slit's (or waveguide's or photodetector's) SLO1A 18-1401A position XO1A 18-1491AOC specified by θO1A 18-1471A and SO1A 18-1461A, m is the diffraction order, and ngrI1-O1A 18-1041A is the averaged effective refractive index of propagation of the medium at wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1321A. Note that some time we would refer to just a general planar-waveguiding refractive index ngr 18-1040 for the grating region. When there is substantial refractive index variation as a function of the wavelength, the denotation of ngr 18-1040 by ngrI1-O1A 18-1041A or ngrI1-O2A 18-1042A is just to make the statement more precise as is well known to those skilled in the art. Hence, they are used interchangeably and ngr 18-1040 is often used for simplicity and is not meant to limit the scope of the present invention. Eq. (29) ensures that the free-space wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1322A in Eq.(29) is the wavelength that will diffract to this first “anchor” output slit SLO1A 18-1401A from input slit SLI1, and is called the first anchor output wavelength.
In Eq. (29), groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i”, and Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=Xi+1 for i<0 (so ja=|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). Since the groove position X0 at the grating center with i=0 is given, this will give one of the two equations needed to generate groove positions X1 and X−1 with i=1 and i=−1, and one of the two equations needed to generate all other grooves similarly. This is only an illustration as there can be situations. For example, the initial grooves may not be at the grating center at X0 and may be at other groove locations. The mathematical expression given by Eq. 29 is numerically exact for the optical path difference requirement in the diffraction grating and is actively adjusted for every groove on HR-CCG.
The second of these conditions being specific for a particular design goal of a curved-grating spectrometer. The second condition in general can be mathematically expressed as
f(Xi)=constant (30)
where in Eq. (30), the function “f” or the “constant” on the right-hand-side of Eq. (30), can be depending on other design parameters such as the input slit and output slit positions or the positions of the adjacent grooves and other parameters (e.g. θI1,SI1,θO1A,SO1A, m, ngrI1-O1A, Xja) that are already known. The functional variable involved is Xi 18-160|i|P/N which is the variable to be solved. Specific examples of the second condition are described later in the application. Eq. (30) will give the second of the two equations needed to generate all the groove positions.
The unknown variables in both equations Eq. (29) and Eq. (30) are x- and y-coordinates of the location vector Xi 18-160|i|P/N of the i-th groove Xi=(xi, yi). For a given input-slit (or input-waveguide) location XI1 18-1291OC given by θI1 18-1271 and SI1 18-1261, anchor output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) location XO1A 18-1491AOC given by θO1A 18-1471A and SO1A 18-1461A, and the previous ja-th groove position Xja, the positional vector for the i-th groove Xi 18-160|i|P/N is completely specified by equations Eq. (29) and Eq. (30) for a given wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1321A to output slit SLO1A 18-1201A, effective refractive index of propagation ngr-I1-O1A, and the diffraction order m.
The above two equations Eq. (29) and Eq. (30) are needed to solve for the two unknown numbers in Xi=(xi, yi), namely x-coordinate xi and y-coordinate yi of the ith groove. These two equations are solved analytically, numerically, or computationally for the values of Xi=(xi, yi) 18-160|i|P/N using equations solving methods that are known to those skilled in the art. The groove positions Xi starting from i=0, 1, 2 . . . or i=0, −1, −2 . . . are iteratively solved with the groove location of the preceding groove Xja already solved or specified starting from the location of initial grooves X1 or X−1, or any other initial groove positions, such as X0=(0,0), whichever is applicable.
This fifth step of the HR-CCG specifications ensures that the rays from all the grooves basically converge to a single point at the first anchor output location XO1A 18-1491AOC. This ensures the rays from HR-CCG will focus well at output slit SLO1 18-1401 with minimal spatial focusing aberration, and therefore enabling a small focused spot size at the output slit.
Sixth: In an alternative embodiment, the second constraint is further given by choosing the function f so that:
Sgn(i−ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,Xja)])=m*λI1-O2A/ngr-I1-O2A, (31)
where D2(θO2A,SO2A,Xi) is the distance from Xi 18-160|i|P/N to a second “anchor” output slit SLO2A 18-1402A at position XO2A 18-1492AOC, whose location is specified by a second anchor output angle θO2A 18-1471A that is sustained between the line joining the second anchor output slit SLO2A 18-1402A position XO2A 18-1492AOC to the grating center CGC 18-1050 at X0 and the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N, and a second anchor output distance SO2A 18-1461A from the grating center CGC 18-1050 at X0 to the second anchor output slit SLO2A 18-1402A position XO2A 18-1492AOC. Note for example that f in Eq. (30) is the left hand side of Eq. 31 and the “constant” in Eq. (30) is the right hand side of Eq. (31).
The coordinate of the second anchor output slit SLO2A 18-1402A is denoted by: XO2A 18-1492AOC (32A)
and is given by
XO2A=(−SO2A*Sin(θO2A),SO2A*Cos(θO2A)). (32B)
The width of the second anchor output slit SLO2A 18-1402A being adjustable, and further the width of the second anchor output slit specified by a second anchor output slit width WO2A 18-1492AW. The free-space wavelength λI1-O2A 18-1322A in Eq.(31) is the wavelength that will diffract to this second “anchor” output slit SLO2A 18-1402A from input slit SLI1, and is called the second anchor output wavelength.
Note that this second “anchor” output slit may be one of the No output slits specified as {SLO1, . . . , SLONo} or it may be “addition to the No output slits specified as {SLO1, . . . , SLONo}. Such anchor output slits are defined for the purpose of discussion such as to define how the grating is generated, and not limitation in that in the actual implementation, this middle-wavelength output slit does not have to actually physically exist. In any case, it is specifically specified as the “anchor slit” and it carries a subscript “A” to distinguish it from the other output slits whose positions will be determined differently from such “anchor output slits”.
In Eq. (31), groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i”, and Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=Xi+1 for i<0 (so ja=|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved).
Eq. (31) imposes that spectral energy in the input beam at a second anchor output wavelength λI1-O2A will be diffracted by the grating to the second anchor output slit direction at second anchor output angle θO2A. The wavelength λI1-O2A 8-1322A is at this point unknown and has to be solved and there are various ways to do so.
Arbitrariness in the Generation of the Initial Grooves
(Preferred embodiment: two-groove case with exact solution and with λI1-O1A first chosen) In another preferred embodiment, the initial set of grooves is made in the following ways: an initial two groove positions are set at:
X1=(d/2,0) (33A)
and
X−1=(−d/2,0) (34A)
and there is no groove at X0. Alternatively, the two grooves can be:
X0=(0,0) (33B)
and
X1=(d,0) (34B)
or alternatively, the two grooves can also be:
X0=(0,0) (33C)
and
X−1=(−d,0) (34C)
or alternatively, the two grooves can also be:
X1=(d/2,R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) (33D)
and
X−1=(−d/2,R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2 (34D)
or alternatively, the two grooves can also be:
X0=(0,0) (33E)
and
X1=(d,R−(R2−d2)1/2) (34E)
or alternatively, the two grooves can also be:
X0=(0,0) (33F)
and
X−1=(−d,R−(R2−d2)1/2) (34F)
In one embodiment, the parameter “d” being adjustable such that these two points gives for the chosen wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1321A and output slit location given by θO1A,SO1A, the following equation is satisfied:
d*(Sin(θO1A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O2A/ngrI1-O1A, (35A)
In the case of the alternative embodiment given in the sixth step (Eq. 31) above, the wavelength λI1-O2A 18-1322A is further solved by requiring that:
d*(Sin(θO2A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O2A/ngrI1-O2A, (35B)
with ngrI1-O2A 18-1042A being the refractive index of the grating diffraction region at the free-space wavelength λI1-O2A 18-1322A.
In another embodiment for the case involving X1 and X−1 as the initial grooves, the parameter “d” being adjustable such that these two points gives for the chosen wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1321A and output slit location given by θO1A,SO1A, the following equation is satisfied:
[D1(θI1,SI1,X1)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X−1)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,X−1)]=m*λI1-O1A/ngrI1-O1A (36A)
In the case of the alternative embodiment given in the sixth step (Eq. 31) above, the wavelength λI1-O2A 18-1322A is further solved by requiring that:
[D1(θI1,SI1,X1)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X−1)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,X−1)]=m*λI1-O2A/ngrI1-O2A (36B)
In another embodiment for the case involving X0 and either X1 or X−1 as the initial grooves, the parameter “d” being adjustable such that these two points gives for the chosen wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1321A and output slit location given by θO1A,SO1A, the following equation is satisfied:
j0([D1(θI1,SI1,Xj0)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xj0)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X0)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,X0)])=m(λI1-O1A/ngrI1-O1A (36C)
j0*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xj0)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,Xj0)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X0)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,X0)])=m*λI1-O2A/ngrI1-O2A (36D)
where the Xj0 is the grating groove position adjacent to X0 (i.e. j0=1 or −1). The left multiplication by j0 is just to ensure the sign on the left side of the equation comes out correct.
(Three initial grooves with λI1-O1A first chosen) In as yet another embodiment, with λI1-O1A first chosen, the initial grooves are generated by taking the following three grooves as initial grooves:
X0=(0,0) (37A),
X1=(d,R−(R2−d2)1/2), (37B)
and
X−1=(−d,R−(R2−d2)1/2) (37C)
Note that these grooves that are on the “outer input circle” 18-1070 of radius R.
The parameter “d” being adjustable such that for the chosen wavelength λI1-O1A 18-1321A and output slit angles given by θO1A and θO2A, either the exact Eqs.(38A) and (38B) below, or the approximate Eqs.(35A) and (35B) or other similar approximate equations as Eqs.(35A) and (35B) are obeyed, which then determines the free-space wavelength λI1-O2A 18-1322A.
j0*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xj0)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xj0)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X0)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,X0)])=m*λI1-O1A/ngrI1-O1A (38A)
j0*[D1(θI1,SI1,Xj0)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,Xj0)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X0)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,X0)])=m*λI1-O2A/ngrI1-O2A (38B)
where the Xj0 is the grating groove position adjacent to X0 (i.e. j0=1 or −1). The left multiplication by j0 is just to ensure the sign on the left side of the equation comes out correct. Note the location of Xj0 is dependent on and varies with “d” as specified by Eqs. (37A/B/C). Note in general, choosing j0=1 will give a slightly different result for λI1-O2A 18-1322A than if one chooses j0=−1. This is because having 3 initial grooves is redundant and may not be totally consistent with the exact solution for the grating grooves for output slits SLO2A or SLO2A. Thus, one shall only pick either j0=1 or j0=−1 to solve for λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A.
(d (instead of λI1-O1A) and Outputs first chosen case for alternative embodiment) In other embodiments, for the above two embodiments involving placement of initial grooves with parameter “d” (e.g. Eqs. 33A/B/C/D/E/F and 34A/B/C/D/E/F, or Eqs. 37A/B/C), the parameter “d” is first chosen and (instead of to be first chosen), output slit locations are also given (by θO1A and SO1A and θO2A and SO2A). In the case of the alternative embodiment given in the sixth step (Eq. 31) above, λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A are then solved to satisfy either the exact Eqs.(36A) and (36B) (or Eqs.(36C) and (36D)) for the case of Eqs. 33A/B/C/D/E/F and 34A/B/C/D/E/F (or Eqs.(38A) and (38B) for the case of Eqs. 37A/B/C), or the approximate Eqs.(35A) and (35B) or other similar approximate equations as Eqs.(35A) and (35B).
(Another Preferred Embodiment: d, λI1-O1A, and (SO1A, SO2A) first chosen case) In another also preferred embodiments, for the above two embodiments involving placement of initial grooves with parameter “d” (e.g. Eqs. 33A/B/C/D/E/F and 34A/B/C/D/E/F, or Eqs. 37A/B/C), the parameter “d” is first chosen, λI1-O1A is chosen, and output slit distances are also given (by SO1A and SO2A). Then θO1A and θO2A are solved to satisfy either the exact Eqs.(36A) and (36B) (or Eqs.(36C) and (36D)) for the case of Eqs. 33A/B/C/D/E/F and 34A/B/C/D/E/F (or Eqs.(38A) and (38B) for the case of Eqs. 37A/B/C), or the approximate Eqs.(35A) and (35B) or other similar approximate equations as Eqs.(35A) and (35B).
In the case of the grating generated by Eq. (29) and Eq. (31) (or Eq. (29) and Eq. (30)), the above examples shows various ways to obtain the value for λI1-O2A or θO2A for use in Eq. (31) that ensures that for the grating grooves so generated, the tangent to the grating-center curve passing through the few grooves closest to the grating center is perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N at the grating center, and the few grooves basically obey the exact Eqs.(36A) and (36B) (or Eqs.(36C) and (36D)) for the case of Eqs. 33A/B/C/D/E/F and 34A/B/C/D/E/F (or Eqs.(38A) and (38B) for the case of Eqs. 37A/B/C), or the approximate Eqs.(35A) and (35B) or other similar approximate equations as Eqs.(35A) and (35B). It is done by construction, requiring that the few grooves approximately lie on a circle of radius R with such property.
(One initial groove with λI1-O1A first chosen) In another embodiment, with λI1-O1A first chosen, the initial grooves are generated by taking the groove X0 as the only groove in the initial set of grooves.
X0=(0,0) (39)
In this case, there is no constraint on X1 or X−1. A grating still can be generated based on Eq. (29) and Eq. (31) (or Eq. (29) and Eq. (30)), but there is no guarantee that the “actual” grating center tangent normal line LGCTN 1050TN (that by definition perpendicular to the tangent LGCT 1050T) will coincided with the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050. As discussed above, when that happens, it just amount to a redefinition of the angles for the input and output slits, and the “actual” grating center tangent normal line LGCTN 1050TN shall take on the role of the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 1050 instead. To put it in another way, it is worth noting that an arbitrary choices of the values of λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A given all other parameters like θO1A and θO2A etc or the values of θO1A and θO2A given all other parameters like λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A etc, that deviate from the values given by the above procedure (e.g. by picking X0 as the only initial point) will still enable the grating grooves to be generated based on Eq. (29) and Eq. (31) (or Eq. (29) and Eq. (30)), however, the tangent to the grating-center curve joining the grooves closest to the grating center will no longer be perpendicular to the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 18-1050N. This simply results in a re-orientation of the true grating center normal line so that a new grating-center normal line that is perpendicular to the tangent to the grating-center curve joining the grooves shall be used to measure the input slit angle and output slit angle and hence altering their angles to new values. Under this new grating-center normal line, the grating so generated would be equivalent to the case in which the value of λI1-O2A is given by one of the above procedures but with the input slit angle and output slit angle altered to their new values.
Broadband Two Anchor Wavelengths with Multiple Outputs Slits
Specifically, this section refer to
Let the output angle for wavelength λBI1-M 19-1121M after diffraction from the grating be θI1-OM 19-147M. For a potential output slit, called the middle-wavelength output slit SLOM 19-140M at θI1-OM 19-147M and location λOM 19-149M, the output wavelength from this output slit for the beam from input slit SLI1 will be labelled as λI1-OM 19-132M, and λI1-OM=λBI1-M. These are defined for the purpose of discussion such as to define how the grating is generated, and not limitation in that in the actual implementation, this middle-wavelength output slit does not have to actually physically exist.
In an embodiment of the present invention λI1-OM 19-132M is placed between the first anchor output wavelength λI1-O1A 19-1321A and the second anchor output wavelength λI1-O2A 19-1322A as it would be advantages because the spatial focusing aberrations at the first anchor output slit SLO1A 19-1401A and the second anchor output slit SLO2A 19-1402A are essentially zero, giving the highest spectral resolution at λI1-O1A 19-1321A and λI1-O2A 19-1322A. That means the spectral resolution for a wavelength λI1-Om 19-132m (where m is an integer labeling the channel number) around the designed middle wavelength λI1-OM 19-132M, that is between λI1-O1A and λI1-O2A will also be minimized for which the output slit SLOk 19-140k receiving that wavelength will have an output slit angle θI1-Ok 19-147k that is between θI1-O1A 19-1471A and θI1-O2A 19-1472A, and thus it is spatially located in-between the anchor output slits SLO1A 19-1401A and SLO2A 19-1402A and generally near a line joining the anchor output slits SLO1A 19-1401A and SLO2A 19-1402A.
The spatial closeness of slit SLOk 19-140k to the aberration free points at slits SLO1A 19-1401A and SLO2A 19-1402A makes the focusing at SLOk 19-140m also nearly aberration free and hence high spectral resolution can be achieved at output wavelength λI1-Ok 19-132k.
Furthermore, if 19-1000 is “designed” for input beam from slit SLI1 19-1201 that is expected to have a spectral span from λBI1-M 19-1121M to a wavelength λLBI1-M-X % 19-1121(X %) ML for beams at output angle θLI1-OM-X % 19-147M(X %) L where θLI1-OM-X % is to the left (assuming the front is facing the output slit looking from the grating center) of the output angle θI1-OM 19-147M for wavelength λI1-OM 19-132M that encompasses X % of the total spectral energy on one side of λI1-OM 19-132M from λI1-OM to XLBI1-M-X %, and a spectral span from XBI1-M 19-1121M to a wavelength λRBI1-M-Y % 19-1121(Y %) MR for beams at output angle θRI1-OM-Y % 19-147M(Y %) R where θRI1-OM-Y % 19-147M(Y %) R is to the right of the output angle θI1-OM 19-147M for wavelength λI1-OM 19-132M that encompasses Y % of the total spectral energy on one side of λI1-OM 19-132M from λI1-OM to λRBI1-M-Y % 19-1121 (Y %) MR.
For output slit SLLOM-X % 19-140M(X %) L at θLI1-OM-X % 19-147M(X %) L, the output wavelength from this output slit for the beam from input slit SLI1 will be labelled as λLI1-OM-S % 19-132M(X %) L, and λLI1-OM-X %=λLBI1-M-X %. Likewise, for output slit SLROM-Y % 19-140M(Y %) R at θRI1-OM-Y % 19-147M(Y %) R, the output wavelength from this output slit for the beam from input slit SLI1 will be labelled as λRI1-OM-Y % 19-132M(Y %) R, and λRI1-OM-Y %=λRBI1-M-Y %.
For some applications that is designed to process a beam spectral width ΔλBI1-M 19-1121MSW (see
For some applications that is designed to process a beam spectral width ΔλBI1-M 19-1121MSW (see
In other applications that is designed to process a relatively wide spectral width (e.g spectral width ΔλI1-M 18-1121MSW with ΔλI1-M>0.1% of λI1-M 18-1121M), it is typically advantages to place the anchor outputs at around 25% of the energy or more at both sides.
In as yet another applications that is designed to process a relatively wide spectral width (e.g spectral width ΔλI1-M 18-1121MSW with ΔλI1-M>1% of λI1-M 18-1121M), it is typically advantages to place the anchor outputs at around 40% of the energy or more at both sides so that λI1-O1A<λI1-L40% and λI1-O2A>λI1-R40% (for the situation λI1-O1A<λI1-O2A and λI1-L40%<λI1-R40%; for λI1-L40%>λI1-R40% just exchange λI1-L40% and λI1-R40%) or λI1-O2A<λI1-L40% and λI1-O1A>λI1-R40% (for the situation λI1-O2A<λI1-O1A and λI1-L40%<λI1-R40%; for λI1-L40%>λI1-R40% just exchange λI1-L40% and λI1-R40%).
Plurality of Output Slits
As shown in
xOk=−SOk*Sin(θOk) (40A)
and its y-coordinate:
yOk=SOk*Cos(θOk). (40B)
The width of the kth output slit being adjustable, and further the width the kth output slit specified by a kth output slit width WOk 19-149kW.
Wavelengths and Angles of Output Slits
The output slit wavelength λI1-Ok 19-132k is given by:
d*(Sin(θOk)+Sin(θI1))=m*ΔI1-Ok/ngrI1-Ok, Eq. (41)
which will ensure that spectral energy in the input beam at output wavelength λI1-Ok 19-132k will be diffracted by the grating to the kth output slit direction at output angle θOk 19-147k. As noted before, equation like Eq. (41) is an approximate form. Alternatively, the exact form below:
j0*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xj0)+D2(θOk,SOk,Xj0)]−[D1(θI1SI1,X0)+D2(θOk,SOk,X0)])=m*λI1-Ok/ngrI1-Ok (42)
where the Xj0 is the grating groove position adjacent to X0 (i.e. j0=1 or −1). The left multiplication by j0 is just to ensure the sign on the left side of the equation comes out correct. Eq. (42) can be used to obtain wavelength λI1-Ok 19-132k. Note that Eq. (42) is depending on two grating center grooves (X0 and Xj0) whose positions are already solved (this is equivalent to knowing d in Eq. (41)) and θOk 19-147k, SOk 19-146k are given by the position of the output slit k XOk 19-149kOC. Hence the only unknown in Eq. (42) is λI1-Ok 19-132k, which can then be solved numerically for the value that satisfies Eq. (42). As shown by the approximate form Eq.(41), λI1-Ok 19-132k is basically determined by the output angle θOk 19-147k and is only weakly depending SOk 19-146k, which is needed only when one uses the more exact form of Eq.(41). Thus, for every angle θOk 19-147k, there is an output wavelength λI1-Ok 19-132k for that angle. Thus, one has a choice to either pick the wavelength of the output slit and find its angle or pick the angle of the output slit and obtain its wavelength later.
Below, we will discuss for an output slit SLOk 19-140k with a given intended output wavelength λI1-Ok 19-132k, how one would get its preferred location XOk 19-149kOC.
Determining the Preferred Position for the Output Slit k
Specifically, as shown in
[D1(θO1,DI1,Xi)+D2(θL(i,i−1)I1-OkP,SL(i,i−1)I1-OkP,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xi−1)+D2(θL(i,i−1)I1-OkP,SL(i,i−1)I1-OkP,Xi−1)]=m*λI1-Ok/ngrI1-Ok (43)
wherein D2(θL(i,i−1)I1-OkP,SL(i,i−1)I1-OkP,Xi) is the distance from Xi 19-160|i|P/N to the point P 19-189kP on line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok c(i,i−1)L, D1(θI1,SI1,Xi) is the distance from Xi 19-160|i|P/N to the first input slit at XI1. Line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok 19-189k(i,i−1)L is generated when SL(i,i−1)I1-OkP 19-189kP(i,i−1)S increases from an initial small value to a value larger than the estimated position of SOk 19-146k which is typically close to the value of SO1A 19-1461A or SO2A 19-1462A that are already known. There are many ways to parameterize line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok 19-189k(i,i−1)L. The locus of points tracing out line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok 19-189k(i,i−1)L is independent on parameterization and is solely dependent on the above equation that completely defines the locus of points tracing out line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok 19-189k(i,i−1)L.
The second line, called Line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L being parameterized by an angle θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ 19-189kQ(j,j−1)D and a distance SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ 19-189kQ(j,j−1)S. The angle θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ 19-189 kQ(j,j−1)D is sustained between the line joining a point Q (along line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L) to the grating center CGC 19-1050 and the grating-center circle normal line LGCCN 19-1050N. The distance SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ 19-189kQ(j,j−1)S from the grating center CGC 19-1050 to the same point Q (along L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L). Equivalently Line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L is parameterized by the coordinates XL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ=(xL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ, yL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ) 19-189kQ(i,i−1)C where xL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ=−SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ*Sin(θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ) 19-189kQ(i,i−1)Cx and yL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ=SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ*Cos(θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ) 19-189kQ(i,i−1)Cy, for which the following equation is satisfied based on the grating grooves of number “j” and “(j−1)”:
[D1(θI1,SI1,Xj)+D2(θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ,SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ,Xj)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xj-1)+D2(θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ,SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ,Xj-1)]=m*λI1-Ok/ngrI1-Ok (44)
wherein D2(θL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ, SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ, Xj) is the distance from Xj 19-160|j|P/N to a point Q with coordinate XL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ 19-189kQ(j,j−1)C on line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L, D1(θI1,SI1, Xj) is the distance from Xj 19-160|j|P/N to the first input slit at XI1 19-1201. The first line is generated when SL(j,j-1)I1-OkQ 19-189kQ(i,i−1)S increases from an initial small value to a value larger than the estimated position of SOk 19-146k, which is typically close to the value of SO1A 19-1461A or SO2A 19-1462A that are already known. There are many ways to parameterize line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L. The locus of points tracing out L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L is independent on parameterization and is solely dependent on the above equation that completely defines the locus of points tracing out Line-j.
Determining the Preferred Location for the Output Slit k Via Averaging Intersecting Points.
As an exemplary embodiment, it is typically advantages to choose two pairs of grating groove, each from one side of the grating center. In that case, let the grating groove pairs (j,j−1) for grating grove at Xi and Xj-1 be chosen to lie on the opposite side of the grating center from that of grating groove pair (i,i−1) for grating grove at Xi and Xi−1. For example if j−1>0, then i<0 and if i−1>0, then j<0, and i=0 gives the position at the grating center. The intersecting point between line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok and line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok then gives the coordinate XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1). The intersecting point between line L(i,i−1)I1-Ok 19-189k(i,i−1)L and line L(j,j-1)I1-Ok 19-189k(j,j−1)L then gives the coordinate λI1-Ok(i,i−1;j,j-1) 19-149kOC(i,i−1;j,j−1). Below, we will replace subscript “I1-Ok” by “Ok” in “XI1-Ok(i,i−1;j,j-1)” so λI1-Ok(i,i−1;j,j-1)=XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1) for simplicity with the understanding that it is generated for beam from input slit “I1”. Likewise we will also do the replacement for other λI1-OK variables. The location of XOk 19-149kOC of output slit k that shall receive beam spectral component at wavelength λI1-OK is then chosen to be a point either “at”, “near”, or “very near” the point XOkest 19-149kOCest, called the estimated output location, where the point XOkest 19-149kOCest is obtained by a function V=V({XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1)}) that is dependent on all the vectors XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1) 19-149kOC(i,i−1;j,j−1) generated by a selected set of the grating groove pairs with different values of i,i−1 or j,j−1, so that:
XOkest=V({XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1)}) (45)
By “near” means the placement is within three times the beam diameter generated by the input beam at XOkest 19-149kOCest defined by the full-width half-maximum of the beam intensity width, or three times the width WOk 19-149kW of the slit at XOk 19-149kOC, whichever is larger. By “very near” means the placement is within half the beam diameter generated by the input beam at XOkest 19-149kOCest defined by the full-width half-maximum of the beam intensity width, or half the width WOk 19-149kW of the slit at XOk 19-149kOC, whichever is larger. By “at” means the placement is within 10% of the beam diameter generated by the input beam at XOkest 19-149kOCest defined by the full-width half-maximum of the beam intensity width, or 10% of the width WOk 19-149kW of the slit at XOk 19-149kOC, whichever is larger.
Determining the Preferred Location for the Output Slit k Via Averaging Intersecting Points from Rays Near Grating Center
In an exemplary embodiment, the estimated output slit location XOkest 19-149kOCest is given by one of XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1) 19-149kOC(i,i−1;j,j−1) in which the grooves i,j are close to the grating center CGC 19-1050 within the angle at plus and minus 30° from the grating center CGC 19-1050 for which the angle is measured with respect to the line joining the input slit to the grating center and pivoted at the input slit. That is let θgrI1-i 19-161|i|P/N be the angle made by two lines pivoted (or joint) at the input slit location: the line joining the input slit location XI1 19-1291OC to the groove location Xi 19-160|i|P/N (called line LI1-i 19-162|i|P/N or “input light ray to groove i”) and the line joining the input slit location XI1 19-1291OC to the groove at grating center X0 19-1600O (called line LI1 19-1251 or “grating-center to input-slit line”). Then the above requires that θgrI1-i<30°.
Determining the Preferred Location for the Output Slit k Via an Weighted Average of the Intersecting Points by Multiplying with Beam Power
In an exemplary embodiment of the averaging function V=V({XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1)}) shown in
XOkest=V({XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1)})=[SUM({i,i−1;j,j−1})([PI1(i,i−1;j,j-1)]N×XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1))]/[SUM({i,i−1;j,j−1})(PI1(i,i−1;j,j-1))]. (46A)
where Sum({i,i−1;j,j−1}) denotes sum over the range of all the i,i−1 and j,j−1 pairs in the set {i,i−1;j,j−1} defined above, and N in Eq. (46A) is taking P to the power of N, where N is a positive real number larger than 0. In an exemplary embodiment, N=1. Alternatively, it can be multiplied by any function of the power:
XOkest=V({XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1)})=[Sum({i,i−1;j,j−1})(f[PI1(i,i−1;j,j-1)]×XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1))]/[Sum({i,i−1;j,j−1})(PI1(i,i−1;j,j-1))]. (46B)
where f[PI1(i,i−1;j,j-1)] is any mathematical function of PI1(i−1;j,j-1).
Note that one or both of the two anchor output slits may not be physically present. In that case, their positions are still designated but are only used for the purpose of generating the grating teeth, and are not to be used for forming physical output slit locations or output waveguide locations.
Determining the Preferred Location for the Output Slit k Via an Weighted Average of the Intersecting Points from Rays Originated Symmetrically from Grating Center
In an exemplary embodiment, the estimated output slit location XOkest 19-149kOCest is given by the function V=V({XOk(i,i−1;j,j-1)}) above with j,j−1 set to the groove −i,−(i−1) wherein groove i is opposite to groove i and (i−1) is opposite to groove i−1 with respect to the curved grating center CGC 19-1050. The sum is then taken over all pairs of grooves (i, i−1) of the grating.
Generating Multiple Input Silts/Waveguides for Multiple Output and Input Slits/Waveguides Case
In another exemplary embodiment for the case with multiple input slits/waveguides beside multiple output slits/waveguides, input slit/waveguide SLI1 is first used to generate all the output slits using the method described above. Once the output slit/waveguide positions are determined using input slit/waveguide SLI1, one can then use one of the output slit/waveguide, including either one of the two anchor slits/waveguides acting as “new input slit” and SLI1 acting as one of the “new anchor output slit” and then designate another input slit location as the second “new anchor output slit”. The other plurality of multiple input slit locations are then generated just like the way we generate the multiple “output slits” described above.
Two Anchor Outputs Slits In-Line with Input Slit
Specifically, as shown in
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit
Specifically, as shown in
The midpoint of L(O1A,O2A) is denoted as XL(O1A,O2A)M 19-1400AM or referred to as “anchor-Output-slits-midpoint”. XL(O1A,O2A)M is also called XAOSM 19-1400AM. The line joining the input slit location XI1 to XL(O1A,O2A)M called line L(I1-(O1A,O2A)M) 19-1400IML (or as line LIM so LIM=L(I1-(O1A,O2A)M)) referred to as “input to anchor-output-slits-midpoint line” 19-1400IML.
The line joining the input slit to the grating center at X0 is called line LI1 19-1251 or “grating-center to input-slit line”. The line joining the grating center at X0 19-1600O to the anchor-Output-slits-midpoint XL(O1A,O2A)M is called line L(GC-(O1A,O2A)M)) 19-1400GML or “grating-center to anchor-Output-slits-midpoint line” (denoted as LGM=L(GC-(O1A,O2A)M)).
The angle between line LI1 plus 90 degrees (shown as Line A) and line LIM is θIM 19-1470IMD, which takes on a value of 0° when line LI1 and line LIM are perpendicular to each other, and take on a positive value when line LIM is rotated about the input slit point XI1 19-1291OC in a direction to bring the point XAOSM=XL(O1A,O2A)M closer in its distance to the grating center.
The angle θIM 19-1470IMD being adjustable for controlling a performance of the optical gratin spectrometer.
The angle between line LGM plus 90 degrees (shown as Line B) and line LIM is θGM 19-1470GMD, which takes on a value of 0° when line LGM and line LIM are perpendicular to each other, and take on a positive value when line LIM is rotated about the input slit point XI1 19-1201 in a direction to bring the point AAOSM=XL(O1A,O2A)M closer in its distance to the grating center. Note that θGM and θIM are not independent and are geometrically related through or constrained by θI1 19-1271, θO1A 19-1471A, and θO2A 19-1472A.
The angle made between line LIM and line LAOS is θAM 19-1470AMD which takes on a zero value when XI1, XO1A, and XO2A are all in a straight line (i.e when line LIM and line LAOS are parallel to each other) and take on a positive value when line LAOS is rotated about its midpoint at AAOSM in a direction that brings the “furthest end” of line LAOS from the input slit point XI1 19-1291OC closer in its distance to the grating center at X0. The furthest end of line LAOS is the end point of LAOS that is furthest away from XI1.
The angle θAM 19-1470AMD being adjustable for controlling a performance of the optical grating spectrometer device 1000.
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit by 45 Degree and Rotated from Perpendicular with Grating-Center to Input-Slit Line by 45 Degree
The larger the angles θIM and θAM are, typically the worse the aberration for the channels in-between the anchor slits. High grating resolution requires the input slit size to be small, which will result in a large beam divergence angle from the input slit to the grating and a large beam convergence angle from the grating to the output slit. If two output slits are closely spaced, and if one slit is has a further distance from the grating center than the other slit (we will call this as behind the other slit), then the convergence beam to the one behind may hit the mouth of the one in front, which means some energy will go into the slit in front. This result in “adjacent channel cross talk” as is known those skilled in the art. That is if we regard each slit as one wavelength channel. This can be avoided if all the output slits are about equal distance from the grating center. That means θGM is around zero so the line joining the two anchor output slits is perpendicular to the line joining the grating center to the midpoint between the two anchor output slits. An angle for θGM up to plus and minus 45 degrees may still be alright to reduce adjacent channel cross talks, depending on the distance between two adjacent output slits and the angle of convergence for the beam from the grating to the output slit.
The angle θIM is another angle of measurement that has a value close to θGM if the input slit angle is small (less than plus and minus 45 degrees). The angle θIM is around zero when the line joining the two anchor output slits is perpendicular to the line joining the grating center to the input slits. When the input slit angle is relatively small (less than plus and minus 45 degrees), we can also impose similar requirement on θIM as the above requirement for θGM.
Thus, for many applications, it is preferred that the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θIM is within +45° and −45° and the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θAM is within +45° and −45°.
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit by 45 Degree and Rotated from Perpendicular with Grating-Center to Anchor-Output-Slits-Midpoint Line by 45 Degree
The larger the angles θGM and θAM are, typically the worse the aberration for the channels in-between the anchor slits. High grating resolution requires the input slit size to be small, which will result in a large beam divergence angle from the input slit to the grating and a large beam convergence angle from the grating to the output slit. If two output slits are closely spaced, and if one slit is has a further distance from the grating center than the other slit (we will call this as behind the other slit), then the convergence beam to the one behind may hit the mouth of the one in front, which means some energy will go into the slit in front. This result in “adjacent channel cross talk” as is known those skilled in the art. That is if we regard each slit as one wavelength channel. This can be avoided if all the output slits are about equal distance from the grating center. That means θGM is around zero so the line joining the two anchor output slits is perpendicular to the line joining the grating center to the midpoint between the two anchor output slits. An angle for θGM up to plus and minus 45 degrees may still be alright to reduce adjacent channel cross talks, depending on the distance between two adjacent output slits and the angle of convergence for the beam from the grating to the output slit.
Thus, for many applications, it is preferred that the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θGM is within +45° and −45° and the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θAM is within +45° and −45°.
Input Angle within 45 Degree
In another embodiment, the output slits of wherein the input angle θI1 19-1271 is less than 45° and the location of at least one of the output slits is within the area bounded by the input circle IC 19-1080 with a radius R/2.
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit by 30 Degree and Rotated from Perpendicular with Grating-Center to Input-Slit Line by 30 Degree
The larger the angles θIM and θAM are, typically the worse the aberration for the channels in-between the anchor slits. An angle for θIM up to plus and minus 30 degrees will further reduce adjacent channel cross talks (comparing to plus and minus 45 degrees), especially when the output beam convergence angle is large.
Thus, for some more stringent applications such as in certain optical networks, it is preferred that the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θIM is within +30° and −30° and the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θAM is within +30° and −30°
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit by 30 Degree and Rotated from Perpendicular with Grating-Center to Anchor-Output-Slits-Midpoint Line by 30 Degree
The larger the angles θGM and θAM are, typically the worse the aberration for the channels in-between the anchor slits. An angle for θGM up to plus and minus 30 degrees will further reduce adjacent channel cross talks (comparing to plus and minus 45 degrees), especially when the output beam convergence angle is large.
Thus, for some more stringent applications such as in certain optical networks, it is preferred that the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θGM is within +30° and −30° and the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θAM is within 30° and −30°.
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit by 15 Degree and Rotated from Perpendicular with Grating-Center to Input-Slit Line by 15 Degree
The larger the angles θIM and θAM are, typically the worse the aberration for the channels in-between the anchor slits. An angle for θIM up to plus and minus 15 degrees will further reduce adjacent channel cross talks (comparing to plus and minus 30 degrees), especially when the output beam convergence angle is large.
Thus, for some even more stringent applications such as in certain stringent optical networks, it is preferred that the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θIM is within +15° and −15° and the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θAM is within +15° and −15°.
Two Anchor Outputs Slits on a Line Rotated from In-Line with Input Slit by 15 Degree and Rotated from Perpendicular with Grating-Center to Anchor-Output-Slits-Midpoint Line by 15 Degree
The larger the angles θGM and θAM are, typically the worse the aberration for the channels in-between the anchor slits. An angle for θGM up to plus and minus 15 degrees will further reduce adjacent channel cross talks (comparing to plus and minus 30 degrees), especially when the output beam convergence angle is large.
Thus, for some even more stringent applications such as in certain stringent optical networks, it is preferred that the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θGM is within +15° and −15° and the anchor output slits at XO1A 19-1401A and XO2A 19-1402A are located such that θAM is within 15° and −15°.
Spanning Angle of the Grating Teeth
Smaller Input Slit Width Case
Specifically, as shown in
Let the grating input left angular span be defined as θgrI1L 19-1651L where θgrI1L=|θgrI1-MP|, where i=MP is the maximum groove number to left side of the grating with i>0 and θgrI1-MP 18-161|MP|P is its input-groove angle (also called “input-ray angle at groove MP”). Let the grating input right angular span be defined as θgrI1R 19-1651R where θgrI1R=|θgrI1-MN|, j=MN is the maximum groove number to the right side of the grating with j<0 and θgrI1-MN 19-161|MN|N is its input-groove angle (also called “input-ray angle at groove MN”). Then the grating input total angular span θgrI1 19-1651 is defined as θgrI1=θgrI1L+θgrI1R=|θgrI1-MP|+|θgrI1-MN|.
The grating is to be designed with a large enough angular span θgrI1 with θgrI1>θdvdf-BI1-95%, where larger than θdvdf-BI1-95% 19-1141 means that over 95% of the beam energy from the input beam is intercepted by the grating and all the rays from the input slit, after reflecting from the grating, will converge to the first anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O1A and also converge to the second anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O2A, thereby resulting in minimal beam focusing aberrations at the two anchor output slits. Otherwise if θgrI1<θdvdf-BI1-95%, then the beam after reflecting from the grating will have not just power loss but smaller beam converging angle to the output slits, which means it will not be able to focus to as small a spot size than if the beam converging angle is larger. This will result a loss in spectral resolution for the optical grating spectrometer as well.
Medium Input Slit Width Case
As shown in
The grating is to be designed with a large enough angular span θgrI1 with θgrI1>θdvdf-BI1-90%, where larger than θdvdf-BI1-90% 19-1141 means that over 90% of the beam energy from the input beam is intercepted by the grating and all the rays from the input slit, after reflecting from the grating, will converge to the first anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O1A and also converge to the second anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O2A, thereby resulting in minimal beam focusing aberrations at the two anchor output slits. Otherwise if θgrI1<θdvdf-BI1-90%, then the beam after reflecting from the grating will have not just power loss but smaller beam converging angle to the output slits, which means it will not be able to focus to as small a spot size than if the beam converging angle is larger. This will result a loss in spectral resolution for the optical grating spectrometer as well.
Large Input Slit Width Case
As shown in
The grating is to be designed with a large enough angular span θgrI1 with θgrI1>θdvdf-BI1-80%, where larger than θdvdf-BI1-80% 19-1141 means that over 80% of the beam energy from the input beam is intercepted by the grating and all the rays from the input slit, after reflecting from the grating, will converge to the first anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O1A and also converge to the second anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O2A, thereby resulting in minimal beam focusing aberrations at the two anchor output slits. Otherwise if θgrI1<θdvdf-BI1-80%, then the beam after reflecting from the grating will have not just power loss but smaller beam converging angle to the output slits, which means it will not be able to focus to as small a spot size than if the beam converging angle is larger. This will result a loss in spectral resolution for the optical grating spectrometer as well.
Very Large Input Slit Width Case
As shown in
The grating is to be designed with a large enough angular span θgrI1 with θgrI1>θdvdf-BI1-70%, where larger than θdvdf-BI1-70% 19-1141 means that over 70% of the beam energy from the input beam is intercepted by the grating and all the rays from the input slit, after reflecting from the grating, will converge to the first anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O1A and also converge to the second anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelength λI1-O2A, thereby resulting in minimal beam focusing aberrations at the two anchor output slits. Otherwise if θgrI1<θdvdf-BI1-70%, then the beam after reflecting from the grating will have not just power loss but smaller beam converging angle to the output slits, which means it will not be able to focus to as small a spot size than if the beam converging angle is larger. This will result a loss in spectral resolution for the optical grating spectrometer as well.
Grating Angular Span and Output Slit Width
Specifically, as shown in
Let the output beam's full convergence focusing angle at output slit be θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k for a beam entering the output slit k with slit width WOk 19-149kW from an input beam reflected and diffracted from the grating, defined by the angle between the two lines traced out by the beam intensity points on both sides of the beam that each encompasses 25% of the power of the beam from the beam's intensity peak to each of the two intensity points.
The grating is to be designed with a large enough angular span θgrI1 with θgrI1>θdvdf-BI1-90%, where larger than θdvdf-BI1-90% 19-1141 means that over 45% of the beam energy from the input beam is intercepted by the grating and all the rays from the input slit, after reflecting from the grating, will converge to the first anchor output slit at around a single point at λI1-O1A and also converge to the second anchor output slit at around a single point at wavelengths λI1-O2A, thereby resulting in minimal beam focusing aberrations at the two anchor output slits. This will enable high spectral resolution.
Furthermore the output slit width WOk are designed so that θdvdf-BO1-90% 19-1541 is about equal to θcvfo-BI1-Ok-90% 19-134k and differs from θcvfo-BI1-Ok-90% 19-134k by no more than plus and minus 50% of the value of θcvfo-BI1-Ok-00% 19-134k in one aspect of the embodiment to achieve high spectral resolution and low optical loss for the output beam.
In another aspect of the embodiment, the grating input total angular span θgrI1 19-1651 and the output slit width WOk are designed so that θdvdf-BO1-50% 19-1541 is about equal to θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k and differs from θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k by no more than plus and minus 25% of the value of θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k to achieve high spectral resolution and medium-low optical loss for the output beam.
In as yet another aspect of the embodiment, the grating input total angular span θgrI1 19-1651 and the output slit width WOk are designed so that θdvdf-BO1-50% 19-1541 is about equal to θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k and differs from θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k by no more than plus and minus 10% of the value of θcvfo-BI1-Ok-50% 19-134k to achieve high spectral resolution and ultra-low optical loss for the output beam.
Output Slit Width
Specifically, as shown in
WOkest=WI1*SOkest/SROk (47)
and then WOk 19-149 kW shall differs WOkest 19-149kestW by no more than plus and minus 10% of the value of WOkest 19-149kestW. In the above Eq. 47, SOkest 19-146kest is the distance from the grating center X0 to XOk 19-149kOC along the angle θOk 19-147k for the case of WOkest 19-149kWest, and SROk 19-146kR is the distance from the grating center X0 to the input circle IC 19-1080 or the Rowland circle with a radius R/2 along the angle θOk 19-1471 (for the case of WOk 19-149kW), or along the angle θO1A (for the case of WO1A), or along the angle θO2A (for the case of WO2A).
WOk can also be directly given approximately by having its value differ by no more than 10% of the value WOk′ given below:
WOk′=WI1*SOk/SROk (48)
Two Anchor Outputs with Multiple Output Waveguides Designed to Reduce Adjacent Channel Cross Talks
Specifically, the design of the grating, input slits placements and output slits placements are only part of the requirement to obtain high adjacent channel extinction ratio. The way the multiple waveguides at the output slit locations are placed and channel out and the absorption of unwanted back scattered light from other photonic device components is also important.
It also shows multiple outputs with output waveguides WGO1 20-1901, WGO2 20-1902, . . . WGOk 20-190k. The corresponding waveguide mouth, for example for output waveguide WGOk 20-190k is MSLOk 20-140kM and the physical width of the waveguide mouth is waveguide mouth width MWOk 20-149kMW usually defined by the width of its waveguide core. The coordinate location of the middle of the output waveguide mouth MSLOk 20-140kM is MXOk 20-149kMOC.
Further, an input and output waveguide at close to the mouth can take on shape of constant width or can be tapering in width with linear shape or an arbitrary curvilinear shape as shown in
For the input waveguide mouth at input “1”, the tapering region is referred to as region TWGI1 20-1701T. The tapered input waveguide can be characterized by a “virtual beam waist width” given by TWWBI1-IP % 20-1181TWW, and “virtual beam waist location” given by TWXI1 20-1291TWOC (see (iii) in
For the output waveguide mouth at output “k”, the tapering region referred to as region TWGOk 20-190kT. The tapered output waveguide can be characterized by a “virtual beam waist width” given by TWWBOk-IP % 20-158kTWW, and “virtual beam waist location” given by TWXOk 20-149kTWOC (see (iv) in
The tapering mouth region may taper the waveguide width in a linear fashion (linear shape), or parabolic shape, or arbitrary curvilinear shape.
Let the cutoff waveguide width that supports only the up to mode v as is known to those skilled in the art be width WGWOkv 20-199kv for waveguide WGOk 20-190k. In a preferred embodiment as illustrated by device 20-1000, the output waveguide has a tapering mouth region that rapidly tapered from the entrance mouth width MWOk 20-149kMW to near or smaller than the waveguide width WGWOk0 20-199k0 that supports only the fundamental mode referred to as mode-0 (i.e. with v=0) or more precisely the waveguide width that cutoff the propagation of mode 1. Near means within 50% of the value of WGWOk0 20-199k0. This tapering region reduces the wave coupling between adjacent waveguides by separating the distance between the waveguides and hence reduces the adjacent channel crosstalk or increases the adjacent channel extinction. This is then followed by an optional section of straight waveguide SWGOk 20-190kS with a waveguide width SWGWOk 20-190kSW. Thus, this straight waveguide can have zero length (if the waveguide is absent) or finite length. In an embodiment width SWGWOk 20-190kSW is near or smaller than the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0. After that is a section of bending region called region with waveguide B1WGOk 20-190kB1 and fanning out region called region with waveguide FWGOk 20-190kF in which the waveguides are further separated from each other in a radial-like fashion by bending slightly and then fan out radially as illustrated (see
After that is another bending of the waveguide called bending waveguide B2WGOk 20-190kB2 so that the fanning out waveguide is joined to a section of parallel propagating waveguide called P1WGOk 20-196k. In an exemplary embodiment, as an option, the locations where the fanning out waveguides end and begin to bend as bending waveguides B2WGOk 20-190kB2 form an approximate circle called “fanning out waveguide circle” FWGC 20-1090 as shown in
At the parallel propagating waveguide P1WGOk 20-196k region, the waveguides, after being separated by a distance P1WGDOk(k+1) 20-196k(k+1)D (between waveguide k and waveguide k+1), is propagated almost parallel to each other. In this region, to reduce loss, the waveguide width P1WGWOk 20-196kW is tapered out to larger than the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0 via a tapering region T1P1WGOk 20-196kT1. Close to the end of P1WGOk 20-196k, the waveguide is tapered back to near or smaller than the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0 via another tapering region T2P1WGOk 20-196kT2. After that is a section of waveguide bending region called region B2P1WGOk0 20-196kB1. In an embodiment, in this region, each waveguide undergoes a substantial bending such as close to a 90° bend. In other embodiment, the bending may be less substantial.
The above B2WGOk 20-190kB2 waveguide has a waveguide width B2WGWOk 20-190kB2W. In an embodiment width B2WGWOk 20-190kB2W is near or smaller than the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0. B1P1WGOk 20-196kB1 has a waveguide width B1P1WGWOk 20-196kB1W. In an embodiment width B1P1WGWOk 20-196kB1W is near or smaller than the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0.
After that is another section of parallel propagating waveguide called P2WGOk 20-197k at which the waveguides, after being separated by a distance (between waveguide k and waveguide k+1) P2WGDOk(k+1) 20-197k(k+1)D, is propagated almost parallel to each other. In this region, to reduce loss, the waveguide width P2WGWOk 20-197kW is tapered out to larger than the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0 via a tapering region T1P2WGOk 20-197kT1. Close to the end of P2WGOk 20-197k, optionally the waveguide may be tapered back to near the fundamental mode width WGWOk0 20-199k0 via another tapering waveguide T2P2WGOk 20-197kT2. Thus, this tapering waveguide can have zero length (if the waveguide is absent) or finite length.
The substantial bending at B1WGOk 20-190kB, B2WGOk 20-190kB2, and B1P1WGOk0 20-196kB1 regions can help to shred what is called the higher order modes such as the first order mode, which will make the output spectrum more pure such as reducing adjacent channel cross talk and kinks in the output spectrum. Thus the bending part serves as a “mode filter” for higher order mode and passes mainly the fundamental mode.
Optionally, the input waveguide(s) may use the same waveguide tapering, bending, or fanning out scheme, similar to that described above for the output waveguides as illustrated in
Two Anchor Outputs with Multiple Output Waveguides and Absorber or Structures to Reduce Light Reflection into Output Waveguides
Specifically, in order to reduce back scattering for wave that propagates to outside the grating planar-waveguiding region GPR 20-1020, as shown by
Example of wave dissipating structure include tapered structures that send the wave into the region above the planar waveguide occupied by certain materials (e.g dielectric material or air) or the region below the planar waveguide occupied by certain materials (e.g. dielectric material or the substrate). An example of wave dissipating structure is simply via zigzagging the edges of the GPR 20-1020 region. An example of the zigzagging is a teeth-like structure with teeth spacing (called dissipating structure teach spacing DSTS 20-1981TS) and teeth length (called dissipating structure teach length DSTL 20-1981TL). In an exemplary embodiment DSTS=50 and DSTL=100 nm. In general, DSTS is smaller than an optical wavelength in the material, and DSTL is larger than 0.25 of an optical wavelength in the material. The zigzagging can also take on other curvilinear shapes such as square shape, sinusoidal shape, triangular shape etc as long as it dissipate additional optical energy that propagates towards it as shown by beam BP 1101P in
In summary, tapering region TWGOk 20-190kT and fanning-out region FWGOk 20-190kF both act to decouple from adjacent waveguide and can be called waveguide mode decoupling region, which will increase adjacent channel extinction. Next region BWGOk 20-190kB and region B2WGOk 20-190kB2 both involving waveguide bending, will help to shred higher-order modes and can be called waveguide mode filter region, which will help to reduce “side modes” in the output spectrum and increase the adjacent channel extinction as well. In alternative embodiments, one or more of the four regions TWGO1 20-1901T, FWGO1 20-1901F, BWGO1 20-1901B, and region B2WGO1 20-1901B2, may be used alone or in combinations to reach the purposes discussed above. Thus, they do not all have to be used together or in the sequences discussed above though what is discussed above would be the preferred embodiment.
Another Description of Grating Generating Method
As an exemplary embodiment, the wavelength multiplexer/demultiplexer/spectrometer or compact curved grating spectrometer using discrete optical components or with integration possibility as a wavelength dispersion element in a photonic integrated circuit, enabling dispersion of light spectra around a wavelength λBI1. The wavelength multiplexer/demultiplexer/spectrometer comprising:
at least one input slit;
a plurality of output slits; and
a curved grating, the curved grating configured for processing the spectra compositions of the optical beam including a plurality of grooves, the position of each groove being adjustable for controlling a performance of the wavelength multiplexer/demutiplexer/spectrometer, and the position of the input slit and each of the output slits being adjustable for controlling a performance of the wavelength multiplexer/demutiplexer/spectrometer,
wherein the input slit allows an entry of the optical beam into the wavelength multiplexer/demutiplexer/spectrometer, a location of the input slit being adjustable, and further the location of the input slit XI1 specified by a first input angle θI1 that is sustained between the line joining the input slit to the grating center and a normal line to the grating center, and a first input distance SI1 from the grating center to the input slit.
further wherein a first output slit for allowing the exiting of a first output optical beam having a first anchor output wavelength λI1-O1A, a location of the first anchor output slit being adjustable, and further the location of the first anchor output slit specified by a first output angle θO1A that is sustained between the line joining the first output slit to the grating center and a normal line to the grating center, and a first output distance SO1A from the grating center to the first anchor output slit,
further wherein a medium in which the light propagates in having an effective refractive index of propagation “ngr”. In the case of free space, ngr is the material refractive index. In the case of a planar waveguide, “ngr” is the effective refractive index of propagation within the planar waveguide,
further wherein a position of the ith groove is specified by its x-y coordinates Xi=(xi, yi), the x-y coordinates are specified with respect to the grating center and the input slit, for which the grating center has the coordinate X0=(0, 0) and the input slit has the coordinate XI1=(−SI1*Sin(θI1), SI1*Cos(θI1)).
With the given value of the input circle radius R where R is related to the input slit position by SI1=R*Cos(θI1), around the grating center at X0=(0, 0), two initial grating teeth are chosen to be located at a distance “d” apart from each other so that they are placed at locations:
X1=(d/2,R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) (49A)
and
X−1=(−d/2,R−(R2−(d/2)2)1/2) (49B)
where when given the first anchor output wavelength λI1-O1A, the distance “d” is to be determined as follows:
A grating order is chosen and denoted by an integer “m”. Then the grating parameter “d” is obtained approximately from
d*Sin(θO1A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O1A/ngr, (49C)
further wherein the locations of all other grooves are given by computing the coordinate of each groove with the ith groove's coordinate Xi given by the following two conditions:
The first condition is
Sgn(i−Ja)*([D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xja)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xja)])=m*λI1-O1A/ngr, (50)
wherein D1(θI1,SI1, Xi) is the distance from Xi to the first input slit location XI1 specified by θI1 and SI1, D2(θO1A,SO1A,Xi) is the distance from Xi to the first anchor output slit location specified by θO1A and SO1A. The position of groove ja, Xja is typically already known. For an illustration and not limitation, if the grooves close to the grating center are already known, then groove ja is taken to be a groove adjacent to groove “i” so that Xja=Xi−1 for i>0 (so ja=+|i−1|=i−1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved) and Xja=X1+1 for i<0 (so ja=−|i−1|=i+1 is the previous groove close to i=0 that is already solved). Sgn(i−ja) takes on value +1 or −1. Sgn(i−ja) is +1 if i>ja, and −1 if i<ja. The second condition is such that a function f is equal to a numerical constant, functionally expressed as:
f(Xi)=constant (51)
where the above constant can be depending on other design parameters such as the input slit and output slit positions or the positions of the adjacent grooves (e.g. θI1,SI1,θO1,SO1, λI1-O1, m, ngr, {Xi}) that are already known and hence can be treated as part of the constant. The positions {Xi} represent the positions of some grating teeth that are already known.
The unknown variables in both equations Eq. (50) and Eq. (51) are x- and y-coordinates of the location vector Xi of the i-th groove. For a given input-slit (or input-waveguide) location (θI1, SI1), output slit (or waveguide or photodetector) location (θO1, SO1), and the previous, i.e., ja-th, groove position Xja, Xi is completely specified by equations Eq. (50) and Eq. (51) for a given wavelength λI1-O1 to output slit SLO1, effective refractive index of propagation ngr, and the diffraction order m,
wherein the second constraint is further given by choosing the function f so that:
[D1(θI1,SI1,Xi)+D3(θO2A,SO2A,Xi)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,Xi−1)+D3(θO2A,SO2A,Xi−1)]=m*λI1-O2A/ngr, (52)
wherein D3(θO2A,SO2A,Xi) is the distance from the i-th groove located at Xi to the second anchor output slit specified by a third angle θO2A that is sustained between the line joining the second output slit to the grating center and a normal line of the grating center, and a second output distance SO2A from the grating center to the second output slit, wavelength λI1-O2A is a second wavelength that is the wavelength for the second output slit given by:
d*Sin(θO2A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O2A/ngr, (53)
and by solving (50) and (52) for the x-coordinate xi and y-coordinate yi of the ith groove at Xi=(xi, yi), exact locations of other grooves Xi's are obtained.
In another embodiment, Eq. (49C): d*Sin(θO1A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O1A/ngr, is replaced by the more accurate:
[D1(θI1,SI1,X1)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X−1)+D2(θO1A,SO1A,X−1)]=m*λI1-O1A/ngrI1-O1A (54)
further, Eq. (53): d*Sin(θO2A)+Sin(θI1))=m*λI1-O2A/ngr, is replaced by the more accurate:
[D1(θI1,SI1,X1)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,X1)]−[D1(θI1,SI1,X−1)+D2(θO2A,SO2A,X−1)]=m*λI1-O2A/ngrI1-O2A (55)
Note the locations of X1 and X−1 are dependent on and varies with “d” as specified by Eqs. (49A) and (49B).
Independence on Geometry Generating Method and Design Tolerances
As is known to those skilled in the art, the grating performances are depending on the collected results of diffraction and wave interference from the majority of the grating grooves. They are not depending on just a few grating grooves. They are also not too sensitive to the grating grooves being moved spatially by an amount δS less than about an optical wavelength in the material given by λI1-O1A/(ngrI1-O1A) for output slit SLO1A for example, where
δS=(δx2+δy2)0.5, (56)
with δx being the spatial deviation of grating groove position in another grating design from the designed position (in accordance with an embodiment of this invention) in the x-coordinate and δy being the spatial deviation of grating groove position in another grating design from the designed position (in accordance with an embodiment of this invention) in the y-coordinate. If the design of a grating groove position in accordance with an embodiment of this invention is XjDn=(xjDn, yjDn) and another design or implementation or realization of the grating groove is at XjIm=(xjIm, yjIm), then δx=|xjDn−xjIm| and δy=|yjDn−yjIm|. Moreover, two gratings or grating designs or grating implementations or grating realizations can achieve similar output spectral filtering performances for about half or more than half of the filtered spectrum if at least for a collection of grating grooves that are involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location, they are similar in their groove positions to each other in both gratings. Similar grating groove position means:
δS<λI1-O1A/(ngrI1-O1A). (57)
While the steps above is a method of generating the set of positions for all the grating grooves in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, there are other methods that could generate the same set of positions for all the grating grooves.
Thus, the grating performances will be similar as long as for this collection of the grating grooves (that are involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location), the deviation denoted by δS of each grating groove position from the designed values is less than about half of the wavelength in the material so that δS<λI1-O1A/(ngrI1-O1A).
Obviously, smaller deviation (e.g. δS<λI1-O1A/(2*ngrI1-O1A) or δS<λI1-O1A/(10*ngrI1-O1A) or a larger set of grooves involved (e.g. the set of grooves involve in over 70% of the grating total power reflection instead of 50%, or the set of grooves involve in over 90% of the grating total power reflection instead of 50%) will ensure even closer performances to the desired design. These allowed deviations (e.g. a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1A/(ngrI1-O1A)) describe the maximum deviations allowed. When two gratings meet such conditions, we will consider them to be the same design within the allowances of design variations for the purpose of this invention. The minimal of which is given by “same-design-condition” (A): two gratings are considered basically the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1A/(ngrI1-O1A); a tighter one is given by same-design-condition (B): two gratings are considered essentially the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1A/(2*ngrI1-O1A); (C): two gratings are considered highly the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1A/(4*ngrI1-O1A); another tighter one is given by same-design-condition (D): two gratings are considered strongly the same design if a set of grooves involve in over 70% if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 50% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1A/(10*ngrI1-O1A). As yet another tighter one is given by same-design-condition (E): two gratings are considered very strongly the same design if a set of grooves involved in reflecting more than 90% of the total power reflected by the grating towards the same output slit location has each of its groove's δS satisfying δS<λI1-O1A/(10*ngrI1-O1A). The applicability of which is depending on grating applications. For example, for the usual spectral analysis application, same-design-conditions (A) and (B) is applicable, for the DWDM (dense wavelength division multiplexing) wavelength channel filtering applications in fiber-optic communications, same-design-conditions (C), (D), and (E) are applicable.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/482,615, filed Sep. 10, 2014, which application was published on Mar. 12, 2015, as US2015/0070697, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170102270 A1 | Apr 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14482615 | Sep 2014 | US |
Child | 15362037 | US |