Integrated optical filter

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6212307
  • Patent Number
    6,212,307
  • Date Filed
    Friday, April 18, 1997
    27 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 3, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
The invention relates to an integrated optical device having an optical microguide (44) of index n0 between two media of respective refractive indices n1 and n′1, such that n1n0, and filtering means (46, 48) constituted by at least one reflector element placed on at least one side of the microguide, the reflector elements having at least one element etched in layers of index n1 and/or n′1 and/or n0.
Description




TECHNICAL FIELD AND PRIOR ART




The invention relates to an integrated optical stray light filtering device.




The invention applies to any integrated optical device, particularly in the field of optical microsystems, e.g. for telecommunications, or in the field of integrated optical microsensors.




Such a device incorporates an optical microguide, which is defined by a core known as the microguide core between two media, whose respective refractive indices are lower than the refractive index of the microguide core.




Thus, by definition, such a guide structure results from the superimposing of three media, the intermediate medium (the core) having a refractive index higher than that of the two other media. A microguide is a particular guide structure, whereof at least one of the three media constituting the guide structure is laterally limited (e.g. by etching) in order to ensure a lateral light confinement.




An integrated optical device incorporating a microguide is diagrammatically shown in plan view in FIG.


1


. The device is designated overall by the reference


2


and has a microguide


4


extended by two microguides


6


and


8


. The illustrated device also has an input connection


10


and output connections


12


,


14


.




The input connection can be connected to one or more light sources optionally incorporating focussing means or, as shown in

FIG. 1

, an optical fibre


16


permitting the formation of a flexible link between a light source and the device


2


. At the output, the light can be coupled to optical fibres


18


,


20


or to detectors, i.e. in general terms to light collection means. The connection between the sources or fibres, or the collection means takes place by positioning these various elements in front of input or output microguides. Different methods have been produced for obtaining such connections, one being described in FR-A-2 659 148.




However, the alignment always takes place with a certain tolerance, which is consequently not perfect. Thus, particularly at the input of the integrated optical device, there is always a slight light loss. This is represented in

FIG. 1

, where the rays or beams


22


,


24


represent the stray light escaping from the input fibre


16


in the integrated structure


2


. This stray light is in most cases confined in the guide structure and propagates therein. It generally undergoes reflections and will interfere with the useful signals sampled by the collection means (fibres


18


and


20


in

FIG. 1

) at the output of the microguides


6


,


8


. This effect is far from being negligible and is greater in integrated optics than in conventional optics, because the light there is wholly or partly confined in the plane of the guide structure of the device. At present no method exists making it possible to obtain freedom from said stray light, so that there is a deterioration to the operating quality of the device, particularly in terms of signal-to-noise ratio in the case of integrated optical sensors.




DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




The invention relates to an integrated optical device having an optical microguide of index n


0


between two layers of respective refractive indices n


1


and n′


1


such that n


1


<n


0


and n′


1


<n


0


, and filtering means constituted by at least one reflector element placed on at least one side of the microguide, the reflector elements having at least one element etched in the layers of index n


1


and/or n′


1


and/or n


0


.




These filtering means are able to filter by reflection the stray light propagating in the device in the vicinity of the microguide.




More specifically, the layers of indices n


1


and n′


1


in each case define a plane on either side of the microguide. The filtering means etched in the layers of indices n


1


and/or n′


1


and/or n


0


permit the filtration of the stray light propagating “horizontally”, i.e. in the plane of the microguide and/or layers of indices n


1


and n′


1


.




The reflector elements are produced in the media of refractive index n


1


and/or n′


1


and/or n


0


and can consequently be produced during the production of the integrated optical structure. In addition, such reflector elements can advantageously be placed in the vicinity of output connections of the integrated optical device, so as to reflect light liable to interfere with possible light recovery or collection means. However, such elements can also be placed at the input of the device or at any other location requiring stray light filtering.




Reflector elements can be placed on either side of the microguide, thus ensuring a filtering of the light of the two sides of the microguide.




One face of the reflector element or elements can be covered with a reflecting layer, made from a material incorporating gold, chromium, aluminium, platinum, silver, copper or a dielectric material.




In order to improve the filtering efficiency, the device can incorporate at least two reflector elements arranged in succession, e.g. in a direction parallel to the optical microguide of index n


0


.




The reflector element or elements can be oriented perpendicular Cc) the microguide direction and can also be inclined with respect to the microguide axis.




In particular, when the device also has an element for collecting the light carried by the microguide, said collection element having an acceptance angle α


C


, the reflector element can advantageously be inclined with respect to the microguide axis by an angle







β
<


π
2

-

α
c

-

arcsin


(


n
3


n
2


)




,










where n


3


is the index of the medium forming the reflector and n


2


the effective index of the structure surrounding the microguide, where the reflector is produced.




According to an embodiment, the reflector element contains air of index 1.




If the collection element is an optical fibre with a core of index n


4


and a cladding of index n


5


, we obtain:







α
c

=


arcsin


(



n
4
2

-

n
5
2



)


.


















BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS




The features and advantages of the invention will become clearer in the light of the following description of non-limitative embodiments and with reference to the attached drawings, wherein show:





FIG. 1

(Already described) diagrammatically and in plan view a guide structure of a prior art device.





FIG. 2A

multilayer structure permitting the obtaining of an integrated structure usable in a device according to the invention.





FIGS. 3A and 3B

In section examples of guide structures.





FIG. 4

An embodiment of the invention.





FIG. 5

The notion of an acceptance cone for a detector.





FIG. 6

A variant of the first embodiment of the invention.





FIGS. 7A and 7B

An example of a device according to the first embodiment of the invention.





FIGS. 8A and 8B

Another embodiment of the invention.





FIG. 9

A tricoupler output provided with reflectors according to the second embodiment of the invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION




An integrated optical device according to the invention has an integrated optical guide structure formed from a structure illustrated in FIG.


2


. The latter comprises a substrate


30


, e.g. of silicon, a first confinement layer


32


, e.g. of silica SiO


2


of index 1.45, a guide layer


34


, e.g. of Si


3


N


4


of index 1.99 and a second confinement layer


36


, e.g. of SiO


2


of index 1.47 (said indices being given for λ=0.78 μm). The thickness of the first and third layers can e.g. be respectively approximately 2 and 1 μm. In general terms, their thickness is between 1 μm (or a few μm, e.g. 2, 3 or 5 μm) and several μm (or a few dozen μm, e.g. 10, 20, 30 or 50 μm). The thickness of the intermediate layer is e.g. between 100 and 200 nm, e.g. 165 nm.




The device according to the invention can be produced on any random integrated optical structure. In particular, it can be produced in glass, lithium niobate, semiconductor multilayer structures such as III-V or II-VI structures. For example, use can be made of one of the following structures:




glass/glass doped by ion exchange/SiO


2


,




LiNbO


3


/LiNbO


3


doped by titanium diffusion/LiNbO


3


,




in these first two cases the first confinement layer or buffer layer coincides with the substrate,




Si/SiO


2


/Si


3


N


4


/SiO


2


,




Si/SiO


2


/SiO


x


N


y


/SiO


2


with 0≦x≦2 and 0≦y≦4,




Si/SiO


2


/doped SiO


2


/SiO


2


, the dopants of the guide layer being such that the latter has a higher refractive index than that of the adjacent layers, e.g. phosphorus, germanium, titanium or nitrogen.




It is also possible to replace the Si


3


N


4


guide layer by alumina and/or to dope the silica used as the buffer layer and as the upper layer of the guide structure by a dopant decreasing the refractive index of the silica such as fluorine or by a dopant increasing the refractive index of the silica. Obviously, the guide layer must always have a refractive index higher than that of the buffer layer and that of the associated upper layer.




On a guide structure like that of

FIG. 2

is produced a microguide, e.g. by total or partial etching of the upper confinement layer


36


or guide layer


34


, using conventional procedures, e.g. photolithography by masking.




A structure obtained by etching the guide layer is diagrammatically shown in section in

FIG. 3A

, where it is possible to see the substrate layer


30


and first confinement layer


32


(e.g. respectively of silicon and 3% phosphorus-doped silica). The guide layer


34


has been etched so as to free a microguide


38


, whose axis extends perpendicular to the plane of FIG.


3


A. The microguide


38


is e.g. of 6% phosphorus-doped silica. The upper confinement layer


36


is e.g. of 3% phosphorus-doped silica. The index n


0


of the microguide


38


exceeds the indices n


1


and n′


1


of the layers


32


and


36


and consequently any radiation introduced into said microguide propagates along the axis of the latter.




A structure obtained by etching the upper confinement layer is illustrated in

FIG. 3B

, where it is possible to see the substrate


30


(e.g. of silicon), the first confinement layer


32


(e.g. of SiO


2


), and the guide layer


34


(e.g. of Si


3


N


4


). A layer


40


(e.g. of SiO


2


) is obtained by etching the upper confinement layer


36


. The signal is located in the microguide defined by that part of the guide layer


34


positioned below the confinement area


40


.




A process for producing one of the structures described hereinbefore uses conventional layer deposition methods. Reference can be made in this connection to plasma assisted chemical vapour deposition or PECVD, particularly in the case of silica layers, or other chemical vapour deposition processes such as flame hydrolysis and low pressure chemical vapour deposition (LPCVD), particularly in the case of silicon nitride Si


3


N


4


layers.




Moreover, when the said layers have the same base constituent, e.g. silica, in order to obtain a refractive index difference, a doping takes place of one, some or all the layers using known methods. Reference among the latter can be made to the use of chemical reactions in the presence of reactive gases, ion implantation and the diffusion of miscellaneous atoms or ions.




In a structure of the type described hereinbefore, light propagation takes place at a certain effective speed V


e


. The effective index n


e


of the structure is defined by:







n
e

=

C

V
e












in which C is the speed of a plane wave in space.




In the case of the structures described hereinbefore, having a guide layer of index n


0


between two layers of index n


1


and n′


1


(the latter assumed to be very thick compared with the layer of index n


0


), the equation making it possible to find n


e


is:










2

π





d

λ





n
0
2

-

n
e
2




-

Arctan





n
e
2

-

n
1
2






n
0
2

-

n
e
2





-

Arctan





n
e
2

-

n
1
′2






n
0
2

-

n
e
2






=

m





π











in which λ is the wavelength of light, d the thickness of the layer of index n


0


and m an integer. Generally, in integrated optical guides, this equation is such that it only allows a single solution for m=0. The parameter obtained n


e


is a type of mean index of the three layers, seen by the light propagating in the plane.




A light beam, particularly a stray beam, propagating in said structure of index n


e


and arriving at an interface with a medium of index n′


e


will be totally reflected at said interface when the angle defined between the direction of the beam and the perpendicular to the reflection plane of the reflector exceeds







α
0

=


Arcsin


(


n
e



n
e


)


.











A device of the type described in conjunction with

FIG. 1

has output fibres


18


,


20


constituted by a core of index n


4


surrounded by a cladding structure of index n


5


. Thus, such an optical fibre has a numerical aperture of acceptance cone of semiangle







α
C

=


Arcsin


(



n
4
2

-

n
5
2



)


.











No beam incident on the input face of the optical fibre with an angle of incidence exceeding α


C


(semiangle at the apex of the acceptance cone) is guided in the fibre.




In an integrated optical device


42


having a microguide


44


, the invention consequently proposes in the manner illustrated in

FIG. 4

, the production of one or more reflectors


46


,


48


of index n


2


having an interface forming an angle β with the axis of the microguide such that:






β
<


π
2

-

α
C

-

Arcsin


(


n
2


n
e


)













in which n


e


is the effective index of the structure surrounding the microguide.




Thus, any beam arriving with an angle α below







π
2

-




β
-

Arcsin






(


n
2


n
e


)












will be totally reflected by the filtering elements


46


,


48


. Any beam arriving with a greater angle α will be transmitted by the reflector, but could be trapped by the output fibre


50


, because said beam will be outside its acceptance angle (the angle α exceeding the numerical aperture of the fibre). The angle α is defined by the angle between the direction of the beam and the optical axis of the microguide (cf. FIG.


4


).




In the diagram of

FIG. 4

, two filtering elements


46


,


48


are shown on either side of the microguide


44


. Certain applications may only require a single filtering element operating on the same principle. Two symmetrically positioned filtering elements make it possible to filter light symmetrically on either side of the guide.




In general terms, any optical device or detector has an acceptance angle α


C


.

FIG. 5

shows a detector


52


in a case


54


. It can be clearly seen that there is an angle α such that:




an incident beam having an angle α


C


strictly exceeding α


C


is not trapped by the detector


52


,




an incident beam having an angle α below α


C


is trapped by the detector


52


.




In general terms, no matter what the optical device under consideration, there is an acceptance angle defined by the geometry of the arrangement in which said device is incorporated.




Therefore, if the optical fibre


50


of

FIG. 4

is replaced by a random optical device having an acceptance angle α


C


, the filtering means


46


,


48


will be positioned so as to have an interface forming an angle β with the microguide axis, such that:






β
<


π
2

-

α
c

-

Arcsin


(


n
2


n
e


)













in which n


2


and n


e


have the meanings given hereinbefore. Under these conditions, no stray beam, arriving in incidence on one of the filtering elements


46


,


48


with an angle exceeding







π
2

-
β
-

Arcsin


(


n
2


n
e


)












will be transmitted, but will not reenter the optical device located at the output, whereas any stray beam arriving with an angle below







π
2

-
β
-

Arcsin


(


n
2


n
e


)












will be totally reflected by the filtering elements


46


,


48


.




The invention has been described with reflectors located in the vicinity of an output of the integrated optical structure. As illustrated in

FIG. 6

, reflectors


56


,


57


can also be placed at the input of a microguide


44


, e.g. positioned facing an input optical fibre


51


. In this case, the reflectors define stray light-free areas


58


,


60


. Thus, as the beams


62


,


64


propagate longitudinally, on either side of the microguide


44


reflection takes place at the interface with the filtering elements


56


,


57


. It is possible to define an emittance angle α


C


, or semiangle at the apex of the emittance cone (cone in which the optical fibre


51


emits radiation). The angle of inclination β of the interface with respect to the microguide axis is preferably chosen so that






β
<


π
2

+

α
c

-


Arcsin


(


n
2


n
e


)


.












This variant can apply no matter what optical device is located at the input of the microguide


44


, i.e. optical fibre, radiation source, etc., it being possible to define an emittance cone with semiangle α


C


at the apex.




The filtering means described in the first embodiment of the invention make it possible to totally reflect the stray light, whose beams form a small angle with the axis of the microguide about which they are positioned and which are the most likely to interfere with the useful signal. They consequently largely improve the optical operation of the device. More particularly, in the case of a sensor, they make it possible to significantly improve the signal-to-noise ratio and therefore lead to a more precise and sensitive sensor.




An embodiment of a device incorporating filtering elements according to the first embodiment of the invention will now be described in conjunction with

FIGS. 7A and 7B

.

FIG. 7A

shows in section the structure of the microguide


38


and its lower and upper guide layers


32


,


36


. These three layers are of phosphorus-doped silica, the two guide layers


32


,


36


having an index of approximately 1.47, whereas the microguide


38


has an index of approximately 1.48. The layer


32


has a thickness h


1


exceeding 8 μm, the layer


36


a thickness h


2


exceeding 6 μm, and the microguide


38


has a height h


3


of approximately 2 μm for a width 13 of 2.5 μm. The height of the optical structure is consequently approximately 15 μm. Such a structure has an effective index n


e


of roughly 1.4755.




The output coupling of the optical guide structure can be effected by multimode optical fibres. It is then possible to bring about a good coupling by using the method proposed in FR-A-2 659 148 consisting of completely etching the optical structure and then isotropically etching the silicon in order to create positioning holes for the optical fibres.

FIG. 7B

is a plan view of the output coupling area of the microguide


38


. An optical fibre


106


is positioned in a positioning hole


108


etched in the silicon. Reflectors


110


,


112


are located on either side of the microguide


38


with a direction according to the teaching of the invention. The reflectors can be produced at the same time as the connection hole


108


, by simply etching in the optical structure rectangles on either side of the output microguide


38


. After etching the reflectors can be left hollow and then have an index of 1. The output fibre is of doped silica and has a core index n


4


of 1.46 and a cladding index n


5


of 1.45. Its numerical aperture is then:







α
c

=


Arcsin


(



n
4
2

-

n
5
2



)




9.8


°
.













The reflectors are positioned with an angle β such that:






β
<


π
2

-

α
c

-

Arcsin


(


n
2


n
e


)






90

°

-

9.8

°

-

Arcsin


(

1
1.4755

)





37.5


°
.












It is e.g. possible to adopt β=30°.




Another embodiment of the invention will now be described in conjunction with

FIGS. 8A and 8B

.

FIG. 8A

shows an integrated optical device


70


having a microguide


72


. A reflector element


74


etched in the layers surrounding the microguide


72


makes it possible to filter the stray light propagating in a direction


76


. A second reflector


78


can be provided on the other side of the guide


72


. In order to increase filtering efficiency, supplementary reflectors


82


,


80


can be arranged “in series” with the reflectors


74


.


78


. Thus, these reflectors are positioned behind the first reflectors


74


,


78


in a direction parallel to the direction of the microguide


72


.




Advantageously, a reflecting layer is deposited on one or several of the faces of one or several reflectors


74


,


78


,


80


,


82


.

FIG. 8B

is a sectional view II—II of the reflector


74


of the integrated optical structure


70


. In accordance with what was stated in connection with

FIG. 2

, the latter has a substrate


30


on which are successively deposited a lower guide layer


32


, a guide layer (not shown because etched in the section II—II of

FIG. 8B

) and an upper guide layer


36


. A reflecting deposit


84


is made on the input face of the component


74


, which in this example is etched in the two layers


32


,


36


. A second reflecting layer


86


can also be deposited on the output face of the component


74


. The stray light propagation direction in the guide layer


34


is indicated by the arrow


88


. The reflection coefficient on the layers


84


,


86


is dependent on the nature of the deposited reflecting layer and its thickness. Such a layer can be of gold, chromium, platinum, aluminium, silver, copper or an alloy of these elements. It can also be a dielectric material layer. Such a layer can be deposited by vacuum evaporation or sputtering.




The reflector elements


74


,


78


,


80


,


82


shown in

FIG. 8A

are arranged substantially perpendicular to the axis of the microguide


72


. Such an embodiment is of interest when the angle α


C


is very large. However, it is clear that within the scope of the present invention, the reflector elements can have any other possible inclination with respect to the axis of the microguide


72


.




In the case where a reflecting layer


84


is positioned at the input of the reflector


74


, any stray beam having a random direction


77


(

FIG. 8A

) with respect to the direction of the mciroguide


72


is stopped by the reflector


74


. It is then possible to place at the output of the microguide


72


a means for collecting the signal having a large acceptance angle α


C


.




An application example of the second embodiment of the invention will be given in conjunction with a tricoupler, as described in FR-A-2 686 411. The output of a tricoupler is shown in plan view in FIG.


9


. It essentially has three microguides


90


,


92


,


94


having the geometrical characteristics and spacing described in FR-A-2 686 411. At the output, each microguide


90


,


94


is directed towards a photodetector


96


,


98


. On each of the sides of the tricoupler are provided two reflectors


100


-


1


,


100


-


2


,


102


-


1


,


102


-


2


. Between the ends of the two microguides


90


,


94


and in the extension of the central microguide


92


are also provided three reflectors


104


-


1


,


104


-


2


,


104


-


3


. A 2 μm thick metallic aluminium deposit is made on each of the reflectors. The fact of successively positioning several reflectors obviates any defect of one of the reflectors used. These reflectors more particularly eliminate the stray light from the central microguide


92


of the tricoupler, which is not interesting for the signal to be detected, and advantageously replaces the absorber described in the aforementioned document for eliminating the light from the central channel of the tricoupler.




No matter which embodiment is adopted, the reflectors according to the invention can be produced by etching the integrated optical structure using any known procedure. An example is anisotropic etching (reactive ionic etching, e.g. using CHF


3


+O


2


) of the substrate constituted by the layers


32


,


34


,


36


of index no, n


1


, n′


1


.



Claims
  • 1. An integrated optical device, comprising:an optical microguide of index n0 between two layers of respective refractive indices n1 and n′1, such that n1<n0 and n′1<n0, said optical microguide having an optical path carrying an optical signal, and a filtering device configured to filter stray light which propagates in the vicinity of the optical microguide, in the plane of said layers, said filtering device comprising at least one reflector element placed outside said optical path on at least one side of the optical microguide, said at least one reflector element having a surface inclined with respect to said optical path and oriented to reflect stray light away from said optical axis, said at least one reflector element having at least one element etched in the layers of index n1 and/or n′1 and/or n0.
  • 2. Integrated optical device according to claim 1 having reflector elements on the opposite sides of the microguide.
  • 3. Integrated optical device according to one of the claim 1 or 2 at least one face of a reflector element being covered with a reflecting layer.
  • 4. Integrated optical device according to claim 3, the reflecting layer being of a material incorporating gold or chromium or aluminium or platinum or silver or copper or a dielectric material.
  • 5. Integrated optical device according to claim 1, the device having at least two reflector elements positioned successively.
  • 6. Integrated optical device according to claim 1, the reflector elements being oriented perpendicular to said microguide axis.
  • 7. Integrated optical device according to claim 1, also having a light collection element with an acceptance angle αC, the reflector element being inclined with respect to said microguide axis by an angle, β<π2-αc-Arcsin⁡(n3n2)in which n3 is the index of the reflector element and where n2 is the effective index of the structure surrounding the microguide.
  • 8. Device according to claim 7, the collection element being an optical fibre having a core of index n4 and a cladding of index n5, with αc=Arcsin⁢(n42-n52).
  • 9. Device according to one of the claims 7 to 8, the reflector element containing air.
  • 10. An integrated optical device, comprising:an optical microguide of index no between two layers of respective refractive indices n1 and n′1, such that n1<n0 and n′1<n0, said optical microguide having an optical path carrying an optical signal; and a filtering device configured to filter stray light which propagates in the vicinity of the optical microguide, in the plane of said layers, said filtering device comprising at least one reflector element placed outside said optical path on at least one side of the optical microguide, said at least one reflector element having at least one element etched in the layers of index n1 and/or n′1 and/or n0, wherein at least one face of said at least one reflector element is covered with a reflecting layer.
  • 11. An integrated optical device according to claim 10, wherein the reflecting layer comprises a material selected from the group consisting of gold, chromium, aluminum, platinum, silver, copper, and a dielectric material.
  • 12. An integrated optical device according to claim 10, wherein the filtering device has at least two reflector elements positioned successively.
  • 13. An integrated optical device according to claim 10, wherein said at least one reflector element is oriented perpendicular to the optical microguide direction.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
96 05840 May 1996 FR
US Referenced Citations (13)
Number Name Date Kind
4740951 Lizet et al. Apr 1988
4773063 Hunsperger et al. Sep 1988
4781424 Kawachi et al. Nov 1988
4865453 Gidon et al. Sep 1989
5177804 Shimizu et al. Jan 1993
5182787 Blonder et al. Jan 1993
5263111 Nurse et al. Nov 1993
5321779 Kissa Jun 1994
5473721 Myers et al. Dec 1995
5664032 Bischel et al. Sep 1997
5710854 Myers et al. Jan 1998
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Number Date Country
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2 659 148 Sep 1991 FR
2 223 860 Apr 1990 GB
0144608 Jul 1986 JP
0269129 Nov 1988 JP
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Entry
Patent Abstracts of Japan, vol. 14, No. 274 (P-1061), Jun. 13, 1990, JP-02-081005, Mar. 22, 1990.