The present invention relates to an optical device with a channel waveguide structure on a substrate, in particular for up-conversion of IR-radiation from high power diodes into radiation in the visible range, wherein said channel waveguide structure comprises a fluoride glass, in particular a Zirkonium fluoride glass, especially ZBLAN, forming the waveguide channel.
The up-conversion process for converting IR-radiation from high power diodes into radiation in the visible range is a very promising technology for light sources of future projection systems replacing today's mercury containing discharge lamps as the light source. In the up-conversion technique, the light from the IR-diode is fed into a waveguide comprising a material with an energy level system suited for the energy conversion. The geometry of the waveguide is adapted to the geometry of the active region of the IR-diode and has a large aspect ratio of width to thickness.
Especially for the green color component an effective source has to be made available. The best material system known today is Er-doped ZBLAN-glass. ZBLAN is a multi component material comprising ZrF4, BaF2, LaF3, AlF3 and NaF in specific concentrations. The ZBLAN-glass is formed by melting together the above pure components in a glass building process. This material system has been demonstrated to enable efficient up-conversion in fibers and also in bulky samples used as targets for thin film techniques.
Optical devices for up-conversion of IR-radiation from high power diodes require channel waveguides from doped ZBLAN for high performance operation. These waveguides have to match the large aspect ratio of width to height of the active zone of the diodes in their cross section. Starting point for the fabrication of such channel waveguides are thin planar players of doped ZBLAN on flat substrates. There is only a limited choice of substrate materials for the waveguide deposition, because refractive index and thermal expansion coefficient of the substrate must simultaneously suite to the ZBLAN properties. One suitable material is MgF2.
The planar layers of doped ZBLAN can be applied to the substrate by several thin film techniques, such as sputtering, sol-gel techniques and casting. Mostly used today is PLD technique (Pulsed Laser Deposition) from doped or undoped ZBLAN targets. These planar ZBLAN layers need a structuring step to be turned into channel waveguides confining the light beam and enabling efficient up-conversion by conserving high intensity levels inside the up-conversion material. Due to the chemistry of the ZBLAN and the MgF2 material there is no easy and mass productive structuring process available as is the case with for example Si-technology. Therefore, very slow and technically complicated techniques have to be applied, such as laser processing using fs-pulses.
US 2005/0008316 A1 discloses an optical waveguide amplifier as well as different methods of fabricating such an amplifier. In one of these methods a lower cladding layer is deposited on a substrate. A core layer is deposited on the lower cladding layer and a shadow photo mask is deposited on the core layer. The shadow photo mask is exposed to ultraviolet light. The core layer is then etched to form a core having the desired waveguide form. Another cladding layer is then deposited on the core and on the exposed portion of the lower cladding. In an alternative method a nanoreplication process is used to form the waveguide structure. In this process a master of the waveguide is lithographically fabricated including a core shape having the desired dimensions. The master is used to form a stamper, the stamper including a negative of the desired shape of the waveguide. A lower cladding layer and a core layer are provided on a substrate and the stamper is used to form a core from the core layer. A portion of the lower cladding is exposed and an upper cladding layer is deposited in the core and the exposed portion of the lower cladding layer. The document is silent about the materials used for the core layer. In a nanoreplication process the master is an identical copy of the desired waveguide structure. This enables the forming of a single channel waveguide as disclosed in the document, but is not applicable with waveguide structures of several waveguide channels being arranged side by side on a substrate since the waste material cannot flow off.
An object of the present invention is to provide an optical device with a channel waveguide structure and a method of fabricating, which allow short processing times for the fabrication of a waveguide structure with several channel waveguides on a common substrate.
The object is achieved with the optical device and the method of fabricating according to claims 1 and 11. Advantageous embodiments of the optical device and the method of fabricating are subject of matter of the dependent claims and are also described in the subsequent part of the description and examples.
In the proposed method of fabricating a channel waveguide structure a thin waveguide layer of a fluoride glass, in particular a Zirkonium fluoride glass, especially ZBLAN, is applied on a substrate or on a base layer on said substrate and structured to form the channel waveguide structure on the substrate. In the proposed method a stamp is provided having cutting edges formed according to desired contours of channels of the waveguide structure and providing free space between at least some of the cutting edges for displacement of material of the waveguide layer. The stamp and/or the waveguide layer are preheated to a temperature between the glass softening temperature and the glass crystallization temperature allowing the displacement of the material of the waveguide layer by the cutting edges. The waveguide layer is then structured by pressing the stamp onto said layer.
The corresponding optical device comprises the substrate with the channel waveguide structure of the waveguide material, wherein the waveguide material of the waveguide layer not used to form the waveguide channels as well as waveguide material displaced by the cutting edges is placed and remains between the waveguide channels of the channel waveguide structure.
With the present invention an optical device with a channel waveguide structure is provided, which allows the structuring of a multitude of waveguide channels side by side on a substrate in a single processing step in which a stamp defining the multitude of waveguide channels is pressed onto the waveguide layer. The waveguide structure can comprise an array of waveguides, straight and curved depending on the application, which can be formed over the area of the whole substrate at the same time in the single processing step.
With the proposed method it is possible to fabricate an array of channel waveguides to be coupled to a diode laser bar having several diode laser sources arranged side by side. Typical dimensions of the waveguide channels are approximately 100 82 m in width and 2 to 5 82 m in height (thickness). Preferably the height of the waveguide channels of the present invention is lower than 1 mm, more preferably lower than 10 μm and even more preferably between 1 to 3 and 6 82 m.
The present invention makes use of the characteristic that fluoride glass, in particular ZBLAN, is a glass with a relative low softening temperature compared to other glasses. Due to this softening temperature it is possible to deform and shape the material at low temperature, especially if forces are applied to support the flow of the material. A preferred material for the waveguide layer is a rare earth doped ZBLAN glass. Suitable dopants are for example praseodymium, holmium, erbium, thulium, neodymium, europium, dysprosium, terbium or samarium.
In a preferred embodiment the waveguide layer is deposited on the substrate or on a layer on the substrate to the desired height of the waveguide structure using standard thin film techniques. In this embodiment a stamp is used having edges that define the contours of the waveguide channels, wherein the height of the elements of the stamp forming the cutting edges exceeds the height of the deposited layer. The assembly of substrate and waveguide layer is then heated to a sufficiently high temperature and the preheated stamp is pressed onto the surface of the waveguide layer. Temperatures, forces and duration of application are adjusted such, that the edge contour of the stamp is embossed into the waveguide layer. Then the stamp is withdrawn and the grooves formed at the edges of the channels serve to confine the light beam into the waveguide structure. Due to the form and height of the elements forming the cutting edges of the stamp the material is displaced between the waveguide channels formed by the stamping process. Possibly the material is also displaced in the free space remaining above the waveguide layer between the cutting edges.
In another embodiment the waveguide layer is applied to the substrate or to a layer on this substrate with a thickness higher than the desired thickness of the channel waveguide structure. In this embodiment the stamp must be formed to reduce this thickness to the desired value by displacing the layer material to the side. The stamp is therefore designed such that the height between the two cutting edges forming each channel is adapted to the desired height of the channel, wherein the height between cutting edges forming adjacent channels is exceeds the height of the layer to allow the flow of displaced material into this space.
A preferred method of applying the waveguide layer is to place the waveguide material in form of pieces, small grains or fine powder derived from bulk material by cutting, chopping or pulverizing, or derived from particle forming techniques such as sol-gel processes on the substrate or on a layer on the substrate. The particles are covered with a plate, oriented parallel to the substrate. This cover plate is loaded with a force pressing it down to the substrate. The whole assembly is heated up to a temperature at which the applied waveguide material is deformable. Due to the softening of this glass material and the pressure on the glass particles, these particles are flattened and spread between the substrate and the cover plate. Neighboring glass particles coming into contact during the application of the pressure melt together seamlessly, as usually is the case with glasses of equal sort. As a result a plane parallel layer of waveguide material with a thickness in a range from few micrometers to 1 or more millimeters is achieved, depending on the grain size used and the coverage of the surface. Depending on the material of the substrate and the cover plate, the waveguide layer can also adhere to the cover plate as a coating. In the latter case the cover plate can also form the substrate of the proposed channel waveguide structure.
In the same manner the base layer on the substrate or the substrate itself can be formed, for example from an undoped ZBLAN glass. In the case of using ZBLAN material as a substrate, the thickness of the ZBLAN layer is chosen such that this layer is stable enough to be handled as a substrate. This also requires that the two substrates or plates for forming this layer using the above hot pressing process are made from a non-adhering material so that the ZBLAN layer can be removed from these plates.
The use of a base layer or substrate of an undoped ZBLAN glass together with a waveguide layer of an Er-doped ZBLAN glass has the great advantage that there is no mismatch in the coefficient of thermal expansion between the substrate or base layer and the waveguide structure. Also in the case of an additional substrate on which the base layer and the waveguide layer are applied, a wider choice of substrate materials is available, because the undoped base layer forms an optical isolation layer so that there are no restrictions on the index of refraction of the substrate. This structure, therefore, could directly be bonded to the copper cooling plate of an IR diode. By suited surface height structuring of the copper plate, the alignment of the ZBLAN waveguide structure and the diode active layer can be achieved. The ZBLAN structure can be butt-end coupled to the IR diode output.
In one embodiment of the present method of fabrication the stamp is removed after structuring the waveguide layer. In another preferred embodiment the stamp is made of a material compatible to the waveguide material. This means that the material of the stamp is chosen to have a lower index of refraction than the material of the waveguide layer and a similar thermal expansion coefficient limiting thermally induced stresses between the two materials with temperature variations to avoid cracking. The stamp is not removed after pressing it onto the waveguide layer but remains on the waveguide structure as a part of the optical device. The stamp then serves as a cover layer or protection layer for the channel structure. In this embodiment which can be combined with all other embodiments already described, also the packaging of the waveguide structure is achieved in one single processing step together with the structuring of the waveguide structure.
In the present description and claims the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps as well as an “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. Also any reference signs in the claims shall not be construed as limiting the scope of these claims.
The proposed optical device with the channel waveguide structure as well as the corresponding method of fabrication are described in the following by way of examples in connection with the accompanying figures without restricting the scope of the invention as defined by the claims. The figures show:
The MgF2 substrate 1 with the ZBLAN layer 2 is heated to a temperature of approximately 300° C. The stamp 3 is preheated to a temperature of approximately 320° C. and is pressed onto the ZBLAN layer 2 on the MgF2 surface. The load on the stamp is 200 p/cm2 and is applied for 20 s. By this process material of the ZBLAN layer 2 is displaced to form grooves 5 at the edges of the desired channels. After cooling down to about 250° C. the stamp 3 is withdrawn and the waveguide structure is finished as can be seen in the right hand picture of
In another embodiment the stamp 3 remains on the waveguide structure serving as a covering or packaging layer of the waveguide structure. In this case the stamp 3 is made of a material having a lower index of refraction than the ZBLAN layer 2 and a similar thermal expansion coefficient. The surface of such a stamp 3 is not covered with an anti adhering layer.
In
It is possible to provide a stamp having a structure with different heights between adjacent cutting edges in order to enhance material flow in certain directions or in order to form channel waveguides of different heights in the same processing step. More complex waveguide structures such as couplers and waveguide splitters for combination, mixing or distribution of radiation can also be fabricated with this process.
The waveguide layer, i.e. the doped ZBLAN layer 2, can be applied to the substrate 1 by a technique shown in
The present optical device with the channel waveguide structure as well as the fabrication process allow a very cheep and simple production of a channel waveguide structure, in particular for up-conversion IR-radiation from high power diodes.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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06111303.1 | Mar 2006 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2007/050767 | 3/8/2007 | WO | 00 | 9/16/2008 |