Claims
- 1. A method for converting electromagnetic (EM) energy between guided modes of a photonic crystal waveguide having a waveguide axis, the method comprising:
providing the photonic crystal waveguide with a mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis, wherein during operation the mode coupling segment converts EM energy in a first guided mode to a second guided mode over a first range of frequencies; providing EM energy in the first range of frequencies in the first guided mode of the photonic crystal waveguide; and allowing the EM energy in the first guided mode to encounter the mode coupling segment to convert at least some of the EM energy in the first guided mode to EM energy in the second guided mode.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein providing EM energy in the first guided mode comprises coupling EM energy into the photonic crystal waveguide as the first guided mode.
- 3. The method of claim 2, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide includes a second mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis,
wherein during operation the second mode coupling segment converts EM energy in the second guided mode to a third guided mode over the first range of frequencies, and wherein the method further comprises allowing the EM energy in the second guided mode to encounter the second mode coupling segment to convert at least some of the EM energy in the second guided mode to EM energy in the third guided mode.
- 4. The method of claim 3, further comprising coupling at least some of the EM energy in the third guided mode out of the photonic crystal waveguide.
- 5. The method of claim 3, wherein the first and third guided modes are substantially similar.
- 6. The method of claim 1, further comprising coupling at least some of the EM energy in the second guided mode out of the photonic crystal waveguide.
- 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 10%.
- 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 25%.
- 9. The method of claim 1, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 50%.
- 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide has cylindrical symmetry about the waveguide axis, and wherein the guided modes have an angular dependence that can be expressed as a linear combination of exp(imφ) and exp(-imφ), where φ is the angle in cylindrical coordinates and m is an integer and provides an angular momentum index for the guided modes.
- 11. The method of claim 10, wherein the first and second guided modes have angular momentum indices that differ by one.
- 12. The method of claim 1, wherein the bend in the mode coupling segment has a radius R and a bend angle θ sufficient to convert the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode.
- 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the mode coupling segment comprises only the one bend.
- 14. The method of claim 12, wherein the radius R of the bend in the mode coupling segment is substantially constant.
- 15. The method of claim 14, wherein the bend radius R is within an order of magnitude of the absolute value of 2π(→β12)−1, where →β12 is the difference in wavevector between the first guided mode and the second guided mode at a frequency in the first frequency range.
- 16. The method of claim 1, wherein the radius R of the bend in the mode coupling segment varies along the waveguide axis.
- 17. The method of claim 1, wherein the absolute value of the difference in wavevector →β12 between the first guided mode and the second guided mode of the EM energy at a frequency in the first frequency range is smaller than the absolute value of the difference in wavevector →βin between any other pair of the guided modes at that frequency.
- 18. The method of claim 1, wherein the mode coupling segment comprises a helix in the waveguide axis, the helix including the at least one bend.
- 19. The method of claim 18, wherein the helix can be expressed in Cartesian coordinates as (Rcosθ, Rsinθ, Rγθ), where R is the radius of the bend, γgives the rise rate of the helix in dimensionless units, and θ is the azimuthal coordinate of the helix.
- 20. The method of claim 19, wherein the rise rate γ is substantially constant.
- 21. The method of claim 19, wherein the radius of the bend R and the rise rate γ are selected based on the absolute difference in wavevector →β12 between the first guided mode and the second guided mode at a frequency in the first frequency range.
- 22. The method of claim 21, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide has cylindrical symmetry about the waveguide axis, wherein the guided modes have an angular dependence that can be expressed as a linear combination of exp(imφ) and exp(-imφ), where φ is the angle in cylindrical coordinates and m is an integer and provides an angular momentum index for the guided modes, and wherein the radius of the bend R and the rise rate γ are selected such that the absolute value of the expression →β−→mlm(γ/R{square root}1+γ2) for guided modes l and m is smaller for the first and second guided modes than that for any other pair of the guided modes for a frequency in the first range of frequencies, where →βlm is difference in wavevector between guided modes I and m and →mlm is the difference in angular momentum index for guided modes l and m.
- 23. The method of claim 1, wherein the mode coupling segment comprises a serpentine bend in the waveguide axis, the serpentine bend including the at least one bend.
- 24. The method of claim 23, wherein the serpentine bend comprises multiple coplanar bends defining a varying radius of curvature for the waveguide axis in the mode coupling segment.
- 25. The method of claim 24, wherein the varying radius of curvature is oscillatory.
- 26. The method of claim 25, wherein the varying radius of curvature is periodic.
- 27. The method of claim 24, wherein the serpentine bend can be expressed as 1/R=sin(2πz/Λ)/R0, where R is the instantaneous radius of the waveguide axis along the serpentine bend, R0 is the radius of the maximum curvature for the serpentine bend, Λ is the pitch of the serpentine bend, and z is the coordinate along the waveguide axis.
- 28. The method of claim 27, wherein the radius of maximum curvature R0 and the pitch Λ of the serpentine bend are selected such that the absolute value of one of the expressions →βlm±2π/Λ for guided modes l and m is smaller for the first and second guided modes than that for any other pair of the guided modes for a frequency in the first range of frequencies, where →βlm is difference in wavevector between guided modes l and m.
- 29. The method of claim 1, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide has a uniform cross-section with respect to the waveguide axis.
- 30. The method of claim 10, wherein one of the first and second guided modes is a TE mode.
- 31. The method of claim 30, wherein the other of the first and second guided modes has a substantially linear polarization.
- 32. The method of claim 31, wherein the other guided mode is a superposition of EHl,m and EH1,-m.
- 33. The method of claim 31, wherein the other guided mode is a superposition of HE1,m and HEl,m.
- 34. The method of claim 1, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide is a photonic crystal fiber.
- 35. The method of claim 34, wherein the photonic crystal fiber is a Bragg fiber.
- 36. The method of claim 1, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide comprises a dielectric confinement region surrounding the waveguide axis, and a dielectric core region extending along the waveguide axis and surrounded by the confinement region about the waveguide axis, wherein the confinement region comprises a photonic crystal having at least one photonic bandgap and during operation the confinement region guides EM radiation in a first range of frequencies to propagate along the waveguide axis.
- 37. The method of claim 36, wherein the average refractive index of the core is less than 1.1.
- 38. The method of claim 36, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide further comprises a dielectric dispersion tailoring region surrounded by the confinement region about the waveguide axis, wherein the presence of the dispersion tailoring region causes a guided core mode to form a working mode that penetrates into the dispersion tailoring region for at lease one subset of frequencies within the first range of frequencies.
- 39. The method of claim 36, wherein the confinement region comprises at least two dielectric materials having refractive indices that differ by at least 10%.
- 40. The method of claim 36, wherein the confinement region comprises a plurality of higher index dielectric layers and a plurality of lower index dielectric layers alternating with one another to surround the core about the waveguide axis.
- 41. The method of claim 1, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide comprises a dielectric core region extending along the waveguide axis, and a first set of at least three dielectric layers surrounding the core about the waveguide axis, the difference in refractive index between successive layers in the first set changing sign with each subsequent layer in the first set, wherein the first set of layers guides EM radiation in the first range of frequencies to propagate along the waveguide axis.
- 42. The method of claim 41, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide further comprises at least one additional dielectric layer positioned between the core and the first set of layers, wherein the thickness of the additional dielectric layer differs from that of each of any three consecutive layers in the first set of layers by more than 10%.
- 43. The method of claim 1, further comprising coupling at least some of the EM energy in the second guided mode out of the photonic crystal waveguide into a polarization sensitive device.
- 44. The method of claim 1, wherein the EM energy provided to the photonic crystal waveguide has a wavelength in the range of about 1.2 microns to 1.7 microns.
- 45. The method of claim 1, wherein the EM energy provided to the photonic crystal waveguide has a wavelength in the range of about 0.7 microns to 0.9 microns.
- 46. A photonic crystal waveguide having multiple guided modes, the waveguide comprising:
a dielectric confinement region surrounding a waveguide axis, the confinement region comprising a photonic crystal having at least one photonic bandgap, during operation the confinement region guides EM radiation in a first range of frequencies to propagate along the waveguide axis; a dielectric core region extending along the waveguide axis and surrounded by the confinement region about the waveguide axis; and a mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis, wherein during operation the mode coupling segment converts EM energy in a first guided mode to a second guided mode with a conversion efficiency greater than 10% for a frequency in the first range of frequencies.
- 47. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode greater than 25% for the frequency in the first range of frequencies.
- 48. The waveguide of claim 47, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode greater than 50% for the frequency in the first range of frequencies.
- 49. The waveguide of claim 46, further comprising a second mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis, wherein during operation the second mode coupling segment converts EM energy in the second guided mode to a third guided mode in the first range of frequencies.
- 50. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide has cylindrical symmetry about the waveguide axis, and wherein the guided modes have an angular dependence that can be expressed as a linear combination of exp(imφ) and exp(-imφ), where φ is the angle in cylindrical coordinates and m is an integer and provides an angular momentum index for the guided modes.
- 51. The waveguide of claim 50, wherein the first and second guided modes have angular momentum indices that differ by one.
- 52. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the bend in the mode coupling segment has a radius R and a bend angle θ sufficient to convert the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode.
- 53. The waveguide of claim 52, wherein the mode coupling segment comprises only theonebend.
- 54. The waveguide of claim 52, wherein the radius R of the bend in the mode coupling segment is substantially constant.
- 55. The waveguide of claim 54, wherein the bend radius R is within an order of magnitude of the absolute value of 2π(→β12)−1, where →β12 is the difference in wavevector between the first guided mode and the second guided mode at a frequency in the first frequency range.
- 56. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the radius of curvature R of the bend in the mode coupling segment varies along the waveguide axis.
- 57. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the absolute value of the difference in wavevector →β12 between the first guided mode and the second guided mode at a frequency in the first frequency range is smaller than the absolute value of the difference in wavevector →βln between any other pair of the guided modes at the frequency of the EM energy.
- 58. The waveguide of claim 40, wherein the mode coupling segment comprises a helix in the waveguide axis, the helix including the at least one bend.
- 59. The waveguide of claim 58, wherein the helix can be expressed in Cartesian coordinates as (Rcosθ, Rsinθ, Rγθ), where R is the radius of the bend, γgives the rise rate of the helix in dimensionless units, and θ is the azimuthal coordinate of the helix.
- 60. The waveguide of claim 59, wherein the rise rate γ is substantially constant.
- 61. The waveguide of claim 59, wherein the radius of the bend R and the rise rate γ are selected based on the absolute difference in wavevector →β12 between the first guided mode and the second guided mode at a frequency in the first frequency range.
- 62. The waveguide of claim 61, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide has cylindrical symmetry about the waveguide axis, wherein the guided modes have an angular dependence that can be expressed as a linear combination of exp(imφ) and exp(-imφ), where φ is the angle in cylindrical coordinates and m is an integer and provides an angular momentum index for the guided modes, and wherein the radius of the bend R and the rise rate γ are selected such that the absolute value of the expression →βlm−→mlm(γ/R{square root}1+γ2) for guided modes l and m is smaller for the first and second guided modes than that for any other pair of the guided modes for a frequency in the first range of frequencies, where →βlm is difference in wavevector between guided modes l and m and →mlm is the difference in angular momentum index for guided modes l and m.
- 63. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the mode coupling segment comprises a serpentine bend in the waveguide axis, the serpentine bend including the at least one bend.
- 64. The waveguide of claim 63, wherein the serpentine bend comprises multiple coplanar bends defining a varying radius of curvature for the waveguide axis in the mode coupling segment.
- 65. The waveguide of claim 64, wherein the varying radius of curvature is oscillatory.
- 66. The waveguide of claim 65, wherein the varying radius of curvature is periodic.
- 67. The waveguide of claim 64, wherein the serpentine bend can be expressed as 1/R=sin(2πz/Λ)/R0, where R is the instantaneous radius of the waveguide axis along the serpentine bend, Ro is the radius of the maximum curvature for the serpentine bend, Λ is the pitch of the serpentine bend, and z is the coordinate along the waveguide axis.
- 68. The waveguide of claim 67, wherein the radius of maximum curvature Ro and the pitch Λ of the serpentine bend are selected such that the absolute value of one of the expressions →βlm ±2π/Λ for guided modes l and m is smaller for the first and second guided modes than that for any other pair of the guided modes for a frequency in the first range of frequencies, where →βlm is difference in wavevector between guided modes l and m.
- 69. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide has a uniform cross-section with respect to the waveguide axis.
- 70. The waveguide of claim 50, wherein one of the first and second guided modes is a TE mode.
- 71. The waveguide of claim 70, wherein the other of the first and second guided modes has a substantially linear polarization.
- 72. The waveguide of claim 71, wherein the other guided mode is a superposition of EHl,m and EHl,-m.
- 73. The waveguide of claim 71, wherein the other guided mode is a superposition of HE1,m and HEl,-m.
- 74. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the waveguide is a photonic crystal fiber.
- 75. The waveguide of claim 74, wherein the photonic crystal fiber is a Bragg fiber.
- 76. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide comprises a dielectric confinement region surrounding the waveguide axis, and a dielectric core region extending along the waveguide axis and surrounded by the confinement region about the waveguide axis, wherein the confinement region comprises a photonic crystal having at least one photonic bandgap and during operation the confinement region guides EM radiation in the first range of frequencies to propagate along the waveguide axis.
- 77. The waveguide of claim 76, wherein the average refractive index of the core is less than 1.1.
- 78. The waveguide of claim 76, wherein the photonic crystal waveguide further comprises a dielectric dispersion tailoring region surrounded by the confinement region about the waveguide axis, wherein the presence of the dispersion tailoring region causes a guided core mode to form a working mode that penetrates into the dispersion tailoring region for at lease one subset of frequencies within the first range of frequencies.
- 79. The waveguide of claim 78, wherein the confinement region comprises at least two dielectric materials having refractive indices that differ by at least 10%.
- 80. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the first range of frequencies corresponds to wavelengths with a range between 1.2 microns and 1.7 microns.
- 81. The waveguide of claim 46, wherein the first range of frequencies corresponds to wavelengths with a range between 0.7 microns and 0.9 microns.
- 82. A method for converting electromagnetic (EM) energy between guided modes of a photonic crystal fiber having a waveguide axis, the method comprising:
providing the photonic crystal fiber with a mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis, wherein during operation the mode coupling segment converts EM energy in a first guided mode to a second guided mode over a first range of frequencies; providing EM energy in the first range of frequencies in the first guided mode of the photonic crystal fiber; and allowing the EM energy in the first guided mode to encounter the mode coupling segment to convert at least some of the EM energy in the first guided mode to EM energy in the second guided mode.
- 83. The method of claim 82, wherein the photonic crystal fiber is a Bragg fiber.
- 84. The method of claim 82, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 10%.
- 85. The method of claim 84, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 25%.
- 86. The method of claim 85, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 50%.
- 87. A photonic crystal fiber having multiple guided modes, the waveguide comprising:
a dielectric confinement region surrounding a waveguide axis, the confinement region comprising a photonic crystal having at least one photonic bandgap, during operation the confinement region guides EM radiation in a first range of frequencies to propagate along the waveguide axis; a dielectric core region extending along the waveguide axis and surrounded by the confinement region about the waveguide axis; and a mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis, wherein during operation the mode coupling segment converts EM energy in a first guided mode to a second guided mode with a conversion efficiency greater than 10% for a frequency in the first range of frequencies.
- 88. The photonic crystal fiber of claim 87, wherein the photonic crystal fiber is a Bragg fiber.
- 89. The waveguide of claim 87, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 25%.
- 90. The waveguide of claim 89, wherein the mode coupling segment provides a conversion efficiency of the EM energy in the first guided mode to the EM energy in the second guided mode of greater than 50%.
- 91. An optical telecommunications system comprising:
a source module providing EM energy; and a photonic crystal waveguide coupled to the source module and having a waveguide axis, the photonic crystal waveguide having a mode coupling segment comprising at least one bend in the waveguide axis, wherein during operation the mode coupling segment converts EM energy in a first guided mode derived from the source module to a second guided mode for a first range of frequencies.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority to U.S. provisional patent applications 60/265,242 filed Jan. 31, 2001 and 60/268,997 filed Feb. 15, 2001, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60265242 |
Jan 2001 |
US |
|
60268997 |
Feb 2001 |
US |