This invention relates generally to optical waveguides, and more particularly to bridge waveguides capable of interconnecting optical elements.
A substrate may include an optical waveguide layer, which is to be optically coupled to one or more optical elements mounted to the substrate. For example, a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) platform may have an optical element such as a semiconductor laser heterogeneously integrated onto it, with light from the laser needing to be coupled to the platform's optical waveguide layer. However, coupling light from an optical element to an optical waveguide layer is difficult to do efficiently. Very small gaps are required to achieve good coupling efficiency, due to large divergence in the optical beam when it is not being guided (i.e., in the gap between the optical element and the optical waveguide layer).
A method of forming an optical bridge waveguide between an optical element and an optical waveguide layer fabricated on a substrate is presented, which allows for minimal gaps between the bridge waveguide, optical element, and optical waveguide layer.
The present method comprises providing coupling between an optical element and a substrate on which an optical waveguide layer has been fabricated, such as a PIC platform. An optical element is heterogeneously integrated on the substrate, preferably using a technique such as micro-transfer printing (MTP). A first dielectric layer is deposited on the substrate between the optical element and optical waveguide layer, and etched to a predetermined height on the substrate. A second dielectric layer having a higher k than the first dielectric layer is deposited on the first dielectric layer, and a third dielectric layer having a lower k than the second dielectric layer is deposited on the second dielectric layer. The dielectric layers are formed such that the second dielectric layer provides an optical bridge waveguide between the optical element and optical waveguide layer, with the first and third dielectric layers providing a lower and upper cladding, respectively, for the optical bridge waveguide.
The heterogeneously integrated optical element typically includes one or more waveguides (input and/or output), with the optical bridge waveguide formed to couple the optical element's waveguides to the optical waveguide layer. The widths of the optical element's waveguide and the optical waveguide layer may be approximately equal, and the second dielectric layer may be patterned and etched such that the width of the optical bridge waveguide is approximately equal to those widths. The optical bridge waveguide preferably has a nominal width of less than half a wavelength. One or more vias may be etched in the third dielectric layer, and the second dielectric layer if required, and a metallization layer deposited which makes contact to at least the optical element through the one or more vias.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following drawings, description, and claims.
The present method of forming an optical bridge waveguide serves to provide an efficient optical interconnect/bridge between a heterogeneously integrated optical element and an optical waveguide layer fabricated on a substrate. The primary application of the bridge waveguide is to couple an optical element such as, for example, a semiconductor laser, to an optical waveguide layer fabricated on a substrate such as, for example, a PIC platform.
The general concepts of an optical bridge waveguide as described herein are illustrated in the simplified plan view shown in
Second dielectric layer 18 is arranged to provide an optical bridge waveguide between optical element 14 and optical waveguide layer 10, with first dielectric layer 16 and third dielectric layer 20 providing a lower and upper cladding, respectively, for the optical bridge waveguide. Optical element 14 would typically have one or more input and/or output waveguides such as waveguide 22, with optical bridge waveguide 18 coupling optical element waveguide 22 to optical waveguide layer 10. Substrate 12 may include an etched recess 24, into which optical element 14 may be mounted.
Optical element waveguide 22 has a first width at its interface with optical bridge waveguide 18, optical waveguide layer 10 has a second width at its interface with optical bridge waveguide 18 , and optical bridge waveguide 18 has a third width. In one embodiment, the first, second, and third widths are approximately equal. Note that these widths are not necessarily constant, and one or more of them could include a taper.
The optical waveguide layer fabricated on a substrate is suitably a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) platform. Such a platform might include substrate 12, with optical waveguide layer 10 sandwiched between dielectric layers 26 and 28, which are suitably SiO2. The platform might also include pedestals 30, 32, suitably SiN, which can be used to provide endpoint detection when etching first dielectric layer 16 to the predetermined height (discussed in more detail below).
Optical element 14 can be, for example, a semiconductor laser (e.g., GaAs—, InP—, GaN— based) of different types (e.g., Fabry-Pérot, distributed feedback, distributed Bragg reflector, external cavity, mode locked, etc.), an amplifier (e.g., semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA)), a modulator (e.g., electro-optical modulator (phase and/or amplitude)), optical attenuator, photodiode, a non-linear device (e.g. harmonic generation, four-wave mixing, etc.), or other functional optical element. Optical element 14 may comprise multiple device layers (as shown) and/or a passivation layer 34 between the element and dielectric layers 16 and 20, though other structures are possible. More than one optical bridge waveguide may be fabricated as described herein and employed between optical element 14 and optical waveguide layer 10.
An optical bridge waveguide as described herein provides significantly improved coupling efficiency, increased gap length, and deceased sensitivity to gap length, in that it reduces the unguided distance between an optical element and, for example, a PIC waveguide. Assuming an optical element and a PIC platform with respective waveguides to be coupled, the “gap length” is the distance between the optical element waveguide edge to the PIC waveguide edge. In the case of a laser, for example, light diverges as it leaves the laser and forms a cone of light. Only the portion of the light in the cone that intersects the optical waveguide in the PIC platform is captured. If the light is allowed to diverge significantly, the amount of coupled light is small. To prevent the light from diverging significantly, the gap must be made very small. However, the use of an optical bridge waveguide as described herein between the optical element and PIC waveguides prevents the light from diverging. If the light cannot diverge, there is little sensitivity to gap distance. Thus, by adding an optical bridge waveguide, the unguided distance the light travels is reduced or eliminated, and is effectively decoupled from the physical gap between the two components.
Another advantage of the present optical bridge waveguide is that it enables heterogenous integration of an optical element, using MTP for example, which provides an improved thermal environment and improved alignment relative to a flip chip PIC platform. This allows integration with more platforms, such as a low loss SiN PIC platform. A low temperature fabrication path is also provided.
One possible process sequence for forming an optical bridge waveguide in accordance with the present invention is shown in
In
In
In
Second dielectric layer 52 would typically be blanket deposited, and then optionally patterned and etched to give the optical bridge waveguide a desired shape. For example, optical element 40 may have a waveguide having a first width and optical waveguide layer 54 may have a second width; second dielectric layer 52 could be patterned and etched such that the width of the optical bridge waveguide is approximately the same as the first and second widths. A wavelength range of at least 400-4000 nm is contemplated, with the majority of use at 1000, 1330, and 1550 nm. If needed, the optical bridge waveguide can be formed with a slope, to couple waveguides having different heights; this might be accomplished using grey-scale lithography. If needed, the optical bridge waveguide can be fabricated with a taper, to couple to waveguides having different widths; this might be accomplished during the optional patterning and etching steps. The second dielectric layer 52 would typically be removed from all areas not being used for the optical bridge; this might be accomplished during the optional patterning and etching steps.
In
One or more vias 58 may be etched in third dielectric layer 56, and second dielectric layer 52 if required, and a metallization layer 60 may be deposited over the structure which makes contact to at least optical element 40 through the one or more vias.
As previously noted, the optical waveguide layer fabricated on a substrate may be a PIC platform. Additional optical bridge waveguides may be formed as described herein and used to, for example, couple optical element 40 with optical waveguide layer 54.
The embodiments of the invention described herein are exemplary and numerous modifications, variations and rearrangements can be readily envisioned to achieve substantially equivalent results, all of which are intended to be embraced within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application No. 63/194,089 to A. Young and A. Carter, filed May 27, 2021.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63194089 | May 2021 | US |