1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to reconfigurable optical networks and spectrometer scanning engines, and more specifically, it relates to tunable filters for use in such networks and engines.
2. Description of Related Art
Several types tunable optical filters are known in the art. Some commonly used filters include rotating or tilting thin-film bandpass optical filters, linearly-variable thin-film filters, electrically, thermally, or acoustically controlled tunable wavelength etalons and thermally-sensitive cavity layers located between the reflective layers of a thin-film filter structure.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,899,330, titled “Compact high-resolution tunable optical filter using optical diffraction element and a mirror” overcomes some of the drawbacks of the prior art. The patent uses at least one diffraction element to diffract light of multiple wavelengths into different wavelength components. Instead of moving the diffraction element as in certain prior filters, light from the at least one element is reflected, with an adjustable MEMS mirror, back towards the at least one element so that light is diffracted at least twice by the at least one element. The reflection is such that at least one selected wavelength component of said wavelength components will pass from an input port to an output port or to another device. The patent teaches that the use of a single optical transmission grating typically provides a very low dispersion effect. This makes it hard to separate the closely spaced wavelength channels that are used in DWDM systems with 100 GHz or 50 GHz channel spacings. It further teaches that although gratings with larger dispersion power exist, they are usually significantly more expensive and are further complicated by the need to add special prisms. The inventors' intended to overcome this limitation by using two cascaded optical transmission gratings, as well as a high resolution reflective MEMS mirror to pass the signal four times through a grating (by passing twice through each of two gratings). This significantly increases the total dispersion angle achieved, and thus results in a high degree of adjacent channel isolation.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a tunable optical filter hat overcomes the above described problems. In the present invention, a MEMS mirror is used in the input path. Therefore, the required rotation angle of the mirror is only one half of the case where the mirror is placed behind the grating. This makes the MEMS mirror and the tunable optical filter system much easier to manufacture compared to the prior art. In the present invention, placement of a beam expander in front of the grating enables the use a collimator with short focal length and still achieves a large beam size on the grating to maintain good spectrum resolution. Shorter focal length collimators makes the alignment much more stable. With both the MEMs mirror and the telescope placed before the grating, one can use a focusing lens followed by a bandwidth selector to produce a flat-top tunable filter.
In an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, an input beam that includes multiple wavelengths is directed into an input fiber of a circulator. The beam is collimated and then is reflected by a rotationally actuated mirror, e.g., a MEMS mirror. The beam is then magnified and propagates onto and through a transmission diffraction grating which causes the different wavelengths of the transmitted beam to deflect into different angles. The wavelengths propagate onto and are reflected by a mirror and only a small portion of the wavelength spectrum of the transmitted beam will be reflected back along the incoming path and then propagate to the output fiber.
In another embodiment, the grating is a reflecting grating and is used to return the output beam to the output fiber. Embodiments are described that use dual fiber collimators, and each collimator directs its output to a separate dedicated rotationally actuated mirror. Another exemplary embodiment provides a lens after the grating. The lens is configured to direct the deflected wavelengths onto a focal plane, on which is a bandwidth selector sized to reflect a predefined bandwidth. Another embodiment utilizes the magnification optics to direct the deflected wavelengths onto the focal plane. Still another embodiment corrects for shifts in the return beam by inserting an optical wedge in the beam. Another embodiment corrects beam shifts by utilizing an adjustable mirror that is adjustable in two-dimensions.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a part of the disclosure, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
The rotation actuator can rotate along the Y-axis, which is perpendicular to the plane of the page, to change the angle of the mirror. As a result, the incident angle to the diffraction grating is changed. In
For simplicity, in
An input beam 500 is directed into input fiber 510 of circulator 511, the light from which is collimated by input/output collimator 512 and then reflected by rotationally actuated mirror 514. The reflected beam is focused by optics 516 at its focal plan, which is an intermediate image plane of the source at the tip of the input port fiber, and then this focal point is imaged by optics 518 on an image plane 522. The image on the intermediate image plane can be either a real or virtual image of the source, depending on the type of beam expander that is sued. If both lenses of the beam expander are positive, the intermediate image of the source is real. If one positive and one negative (as in a Galilean telescope), then the intermediate image is virtual. These optics are selected so that the expanded beam will focus at different points on the image plane for different wavelength components. The large convergent beam after optics 518 passes through diffraction grating 520 and each wavelength is focused at the image plane. A bandwidth selector 524 is located at the focal plane. Only the light reflected by the bandwidth selector can be reflected to the output fiber 526.
To minimize polarization dependent loss, in
During operation of the device, the returned beam could deviate from the incoming path. If the deviation at the receiving fiber is in the direction perpendicular to the grating groove lines, the output wavelength will be changed. This can be corrected easily by tilting the MEMS mirror. When the deviation is in the direction parallel to the grating groove lines, the insertion loss becomes greater. Optical plane plate 610 with a very small wedge can be inserted into the collimated space, such as the space before the first magnification lens or after the magnification lens, as shown in
A 2-D MEMS mirror 600 having two rotational axes, e.g., the two axes (Y′- and X′-axis) in
When the mirror is rotated about the second axis (X′-axis) of the 2-D MEMS mirror, the reflected beam is defected along the direction parallel to the grating groove lines. Because the beam deflects in the direction along the grating groove lines, this movement causes the returned beam to deviate from the receiving fiber (output port). As a result, the insertion loss changes, but the wavelength is not affected. Therefore, this second axis provides a function to change the transmittance of the filter (i.e., insertion loss). The rotation about the second axis can be used to correct the insertion loss if the module becomes misaligned.
The foregoing description of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments disclosed were meant only to explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best use the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications suited to the particular use contemplated. The scope of the invention is to be defined by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/473,079 titled “Grating Based Tunable Filter,” filed Apr. 7, 2011, incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61473079 | Apr 2011 | US |