The invention relates to the field of electromagnetic wave resonators, in particular resonators for optical communications.
Resonators are basic building blocks for a number of present and future integrated photonic components, such as switches, Lasers, filters and sensors. For instance,
A first issue with such a resonator arises from small evanescent fields they produce, which do not allow for satisfactory electromagnetic coupling to surrounding material. A high refractive index material for the ring is necessary for tight bends and therefore dense integration. Then, however, light is strongly confined in the ring. Only a small fraction thereof is evanescent and allows for coupling to material in the cladding/surrounding (e.g. electro-optic polymers, gain material or to-be-detected material/particles with sensor applications). Furthermore, the peak intensity is confined in the high index material and is not available for coupling to surrounding material. This also makes optical trapping of nanoparticles, biological entities (e.g., cells) very difficult (high power, low efficiency). In
State-of-the-art solutions are the following:
Another issue is that the coupling strength critically depends on (e.g., nanometer-scale) distance between the ring and a neighboring waveguide. Namely, it is difficult to reliably achieve critical coupling due to fabrication variations, i.e., width variations of waveguides and/or gap.
The following documents provide details as to the background art in the field:
In one aspect, the present invention is embodied as an electromagnetic wave resonator, comprising a body, wherein the body:
and wherein an effective refractive index ne(r), as obtained from angularly averaging a refractive index of the material in the plane, decreases within said region.
In embodiments, the resonator may comprise one or more of the following features:
In another aspect, the present invention is embodied as an integrated optics device comprising one or more resonators, each according to the invention.
Resonators embodying the present invention will now be described, by way of non-limiting examples, and in reference to the accompanying drawings.
As an introduction to the following description, it is first pointed at general aspects of the invention, reflecting in each of the embodiments of
Now, interestingly and independently of its exact geometrical structure, a resonator according to embodiments is configured to exhibit an effective refractive index gradient. More precisely, the effective refractive index ne 16 of the resonator decreases radially and outwardly in the plane (r, θ), see e.g.,
As illustrated in
As it was realized by the present inventor, an effective refractive index such as described above allows for partly delocalizing waves outside the resonator body, whereby improved coupling to material in the cladding/surrounding can be achieved, with many potential applications such as described in introduction.
Many suitable structures/compositions can be contemplated which fulfill the above requirement, as to be discussed next.
For example, the effective refractive index 16 may be taken such as to decrease outwardly, along any local curvature radius of the convex hull (or envelope) of the structure. This is for instance the case in the embodiment of
In the example of
Appropriate density gradients might for instance be obtained by modifying the distribution of active species of the material within the body. In this regards, one may use any process suitable for modifying the distribution of such species. As a result, the density of active species (i.e., the number of particles per volume unit) is non-uniform in the plane (x, y); it decreases outwardly, such as to draw the desired properties.
Now, modifying the active species distribution can be done at various scales. This can for instance be fine-grained: by way of additional (non-active) dopants, implanted at the periphery of the body; by multistep lithography; or the like; by nanopatterning; by bottom-up techniques such as self-assembly. Such techniques are known per se. As a result, the density decreases outwardly, along any local curvature radius.
However, in preferred variants, perhaps easier to implement in practice, the active species distribution is macroscopically modified, whereby the fill factor of material 15 is modified. Namely, suitably configured regions of space are to be filled with an active material at the manufacture stage, such that angularly averaged density has the desired property. Examples shall be discussed. In all cases, a density gradient leads in fine to an effective refractive index gradient, the desired property.
For example, the material 14 in the body 15 can be structured with peripheral features 12 suitably configured, in order to obtain the desired index gradient. For example, peripheral features may extend outwardly, such as to decrease the fill factor near the envelope , that is, near the periphery of the body 15.
This situation is exemplified in
In the embodiments of
As it can be realized, a partial fill factor near the periphery may be obtained in various manners, e.g., by way of peripheral cavities (
Despite the many resulting interfaces, low loss is possible if said features extend essentially perpendicular to the main directions of wave propagation (i.e., perpendicular to any closed-curve or that characterizes the structure), as depicted in
In addition, the pitch (i.e., the characteristic distance) between two nearest features can be suitably chosen, such as to minimize propagation losses. Typically, the pitch is chosen substantially smaller than the desired resonance wavelength. In practice, a target resonance wavelength λm of electromagnetic waves is first identified, then the number and dimensions of peripheral features can be deduced and then the circumference of the structure is optimized, taking due account of the non-fractional number of optical field nodes/antinodes in the structure at to the chosen resonance wavelength. Thus, in contrast to conventional and slotted rings, sidewall roughness is not the limiting factor here.
In the following, peripheral features are assumed to be provided in the form of radial teeth, consistently with
Provided that N is sufficiently large, a characteristic pitch is given by the chordal pitch pc, almost equal to the curvilinear pitch p, i.e., pc≈p=rpΔθ=2π rp/N, where rp is the pitch radius. When the teeth are wedged, the inner distance δ between nearest teeth typically varies from δ(rr)=0 to δ(ro)≈roΔθ=2π ro/N. In variants, δ is constant (rectangular or square teeth). Interestingly, the effective index decreases in the depth region (h) even when highly symmetrical features such as rectangular or square teeth are used. More generally, the teeth can be shaped as triangles, rectangles, half-ellipses, exponential tapers, etc.
Next, as the dimensions of the present resonator simply scale with the resonance wavelength, various kinds of electromagnetic waves can be contemplated. Yet, for the sake of illustration, the following description merely focuses on the optical applications.
Now, even within optical applications, various ranges of electromagnetic waves can be contemplated, typically 400-3000 nm. This wavelength range and all subsequently referred wavelengths λ are given as vacuum wavelengths, i.e. λ=c/v where c is the speed of light and v the light frequency. For applications to optical data communications, the following ranges are appropriate: 630-860 nm or 1300-1600 nm. Other ranges within 400-3000 nm are typically well suited for sensing applications.
At present, one may assume that a specific resonator is desired for a given (narrow) range of electromagnetic waves, i.e., characterized by typical wavelength λm. Said typical wavelength λm is determined by the various dimensions involved in the resonator. The characteristic pitch pc between nearest peripheral features 12 shall then typically be substantially smaller than λm, for reasons stated earlier. Preferably, one has pc<λm/2, which already ensures lowered losses. Better results are yet be achieved when pc<λm/4. Typically, for wavelengths of interest in optical applications, pc is between 30-500 nm, and often between 30-200 nm.
Furthermore, the characteristic depth h of the teeth can vary substantially, just as the differences ro−ri, ro−rr or rr−ri, as illustrated in
Satisfactory results are typically achieved when the (largest) radius ro of the envelope is substantially larger than λm, preferably larger than 3λm/2. Improved results will be obtained with ro larger than 2λm. Since pc is preferably less than λm/2 and more preferably less than λm/4, results are gradually improved by providing pc less than ro/3, ro/4, ro/6 and ro/8.
For completeness, convenient transverse thicknesses (z-axis) are typically 50-400 nm, just like for known resonators. Typically, the body and the features are made of Silicon, grown on top of a 1 micrometer SiO2 substrate layer. Fabricating such a device can for instance make use of the known silicon-on-insulator (or SOD technique. Manufacturing the radial features can be achieved using processes as known per se. The definition of the features can for instance be done by standard lithographical methods (e.g. electron beam lithography or optical lithography), followed by transferring this definition into the SOI substrate by reactive ion etching.
More generally, the material used for the body has a refractive index higher than a surrounding media's, thereby allowing for wave propagation. Suitable materials for the body comprise elements or compounds chosen amongst:
Additional material surrounding said material can furthermore be provided as part of the device such as to form a surrounding medium with lower refractive index. The additional material typically comprising compounds chosen amongst:
Incidentally, the thermo-optic coefficient of said additional material could have a sign apposite to that of the thermo-optic coefficient of the primary material of the body. It is accordingly possible to cancel the thermal drift of the resonance wavelength, which is advantageous for many applications.
Also, as seen in
Ideally, the structure has a high quality factor (or Q). Following the above indications, quality factors Q>100000 can be achieved with rings having radii less than 5 micrometer. Pitch and other dimensions of the teeth can furthermore be optimized numerically (using e.g., finite-difference time-domain or FDTD simulations) for highest Q, highest optical fields or highest optical gradients, depending on the application.
In addition, in embodiments, devices as described above can be supplemented with a slot 40 (
Next, for evaluation of the above devices, finite difference time domain (FDTD) simulations have been performed with an in-house numerical tool that solves Maxwell's equations ab initio, in the time domain. The simulations results can accordingly be regarded as the actual wave propagation.
For instance, a ring resonator can be simulated, which is excited with a light pulse through a waveguide being at or close to the resonance frequency of the ring, as depicted in
The excitation wavelength λm used was 1550 nm. The pitch radius rp retained for the device of
Each of
The simulated structure gives furthermore access to intensity maxima of the field for the surrounding material, enabling stronger light-matter interactions and light-induced forces originating from the light field. It further relieves nanometer accuracy for tuning the coupling to critical coupling and works for both polarizations (TE+TM).
Incidentally and as mentioned earlier, a resonator structure as described herein enables a thermal ring resonators with suitable cladding (the latter having a sign of thermo-optic coefficient opposite to that of the body material), even for both polarizations. No shift of the resonance wavelength is observed with temperature.
Finally, resonators as described above can be considered as a fundamental building block for integrated optics in general and silicon photonics in particular. The invention accordingly encompasses an integrated optics device or apparatus built from several resonators such as described herein. Thus, the invention advantageously apply to applications such as chip-to-chip optical interconnects, wherein high physical integration density is needed.
While the present invention has been described with reference to certain embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted without departing from the scope of the present invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation to the teachings of the present invention without departing from its scope. Therefore, it is intended that the present invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed, but that the present invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims. For instance, other materials than those evoked above could be used. Also, teeth or wedges as involved in embodiments need not be strictly perpendicular to a wave propagation direction. Instead, wedges can be tilted, yielding essentially similar results, despite larger losses.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11158530 | Mar 2011 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2012/050820 | 2/23/2012 | WO | 00 | 9/16/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/123835 | 9/20/2012 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140002894 A1 | Jan 2014 | US |