The present invention relates generally to lasers. More specifically, the invention relates to optical waveguides involving multimode interference.
In literature, examples of Multimode Interference devices (MMI) with equal and unequal splitting ratios for N inputs and M outputs are known. The reported geometries are optimized for switching applications but so far little work on MMIs for coupled lasers has been performed. For the latter a MMI is desirable where the two output signals have a 180° phase difference, compared to the conventional 90°.
What is needed is a MMI device, which enables the integration of optical filters and widely tuneable laser architectures.
To address the needs in the art, a 3×3 multi-mode interference coupling device is provided that includes a length L and a width W, a center input port and a pair of outer input ports, where the center input port is disposed between the pair of outer input ports, where each outer input port is displaced from the center input port by a distance W/3, and a center output port and a pair of outer output ports, where the center output port is disposed between the pair of outer output ports, where each outer output port is displaced from the center output port by a distance W/3 where the 3×3 multi-mode interference device is capable of supporting a Cbar coupling coefficient, a Ccen coupling coefficient and a Cx coupling coefficient therein, where when the pair of outer input ports are equally excited with an input signal that has a 180° phase difference, where the Ccen coupling coefficient from each outer input port destructively interferes when the propagation length L is an integer multiple of Lπ/2, where the 3×3 multi-mode interference device outputs laser modes from each outer output port, where the output laser modes are of equal intensity when the propagation length is an integer multiple of Lπ/2.
According to one aspect of the invention, the length L includes a length of 5 Lπ/2, where Cbar≈0.78, Ccen≈0.57ejπ/3 and Cbar≈0.21 ejπ.
In another aspect of the invention, the length L includes a length of Lπ/2, where Cbar≈0.21, Ccen≈0.57ejπ/3 and Cx≈0.78rjπ.
In one embodiment of the invention a 3×3 multi-mode interference coupling device is provided that includes a length L=5 Lπ/4 and a width W, a pair of input/output ports, where each input/output port is displaced from a center axis by a distance W/3, and a reflective surface, where the reflective surface includes a planar surface that is displaced from the input ports by the length L=5 Lπ/4, where the 3×3 multi-mode interference device is capable of supporting a Cbar coupling coefficient, a Ccen coupling coefficient and a Cx coupling coefficient therein, where when the pair of input/output ports are equally excited with an input signal that has a 180° phase difference, the Ccen, coupling coefficient from each pair of input/output ports destructively interferes, where the 3×3 multi-mode interference device outputs laser modes from each pair of input/output port, where the Cbar≈0.78, the Ccen≈0.57ejπ/3 and the Cbar≈0.21ejπ.
In one aspect of this embodiment, the reflective surface includes a pair of symmetric reflective surfaces disposed on opposite sides of the central axis, where the pair of symmetric reflective surfaces are disposed at a 90-degree angle with respect to each other, where an apex of the 90-degree angle is along the central axis, where the length L=Lπ/4, where Cbar≈0.78 Ccen≈0.57 ejπ/3 and Cx≈0.21ejπ.
The current invention is a Multimode Interference device (MMI), which enables the realization of new integrated optical filters and widely tuneable laser architectures. According to one embodiment, the fabrication is based on UV-Lithograpy, which makes the laser especially attractive for low-cost applications in telecommunication and sensing. Embodiments of the invention are also compatible with any generic integration platform for photonic integrated circuits. Further, one or more waveguides are connected to a significantly wider multimode waveguide. According to one embodiment, a set of modes inside the wider multimode waveguide are excited by placing the inputs at predefined positions. The superposition of the excited modes leads to periodic imaging of the input fields after propagating through the multimode section. The type of images and periodicity depends strongly on the set of excited modes. In literature examples with equal and unequal splitting ratios for N inputs and M outputs are well explained. The reported geometries are optimized for switching applications but so far little work on MMIs for coupled lasers has been performed. For the latter the MMI of the current invention outputs two signals that have a 180° phase difference, compared to the conventional 90°.
One embodiment of the current invention includes a 3×3 general interference MMI in transmission as shown in
where Lπ is defined as the beat length (or coupling length) between the fundamental mode (i=0) and the first-order mode (i=1):
where λ is the free-space wavelength and We is the effective width of the MMI area:
where W is the physical width of the MMI area, nr and nc are the effective core index and effective cladding index, respectively; and integer σ=0 for TE modes and σ=1 for TM modes.
In
The amplitude coupling coefficients differ in each multiple of Lπ/2. According to the current invention, six different possible solutions exist for the amplitude coupling coefficients and are shown in Table 1. For larger values of L, the coefficients repeat.
In one embodiment, a fully reflective device is obtained by placing a corner mirror at half the distances reported in Table 1, as indicated in
In another embodiment, a fully reflective device is obtained by placing a flat mirror at 5Lπ/4, as indicated in
According to aspects of the embodiments of the invention, the two coupled cavities are coupled in a way, that little light is exchanged between them, e.g. Cx<Cbar, with a relative phase of (π), as shown in Table 1, where the coupling coefficients are summarized for a 3×3 MMI in transmission as shown in
Other embodiments of the invention include a 3×3 MMI with a length of Lπ/2, where the limitation of Cx>Cbar is overcome by implementing the cavities such that they physically cross each other. □Further, a MMI reflector of this device is enabled if the length is halved and terminated with the corner reflective surface shown in
Turning now to some exemplary applications of these devices, where Fabry-Perot coupled cavity lasers are shown in
An integrated Michelson Inteferometer is provided in
Turning now to extended coupled cavity laser designs using the current invention, where two laser cavities (see
The final lasing mode selection can be explained as follows. The grid spacing between two possible lasing modes within Laser 1 and Laser 2 of
According to the embodiment of
The mode selection mechanism is shown in
According to the embodiment shown in
A prototype using 4 mm long cavities coupled together (where 2 mm are phase shifters) has been fabricated. The device is fully functional with 9 mW coupled to a lensed fiber. Typical spectral results are displayed in
Turning now to a ring coupled cavity laser, where a Fabry-Perot cavity is coupled to a Ring. The structure is shown in
The present invention has now been described in accordance with several exemplary embodiments, which are intended to be illustrative in all aspects, rather than restrictive. Thus, the present invention is capable of many variations in detailed implementation, which may be derived from the description contained herein by a person of ordinary skill in the art. For example a two ring-coupled laser, a two Fabry Perot type laser, or a mix of those. The effective mirror can be realized by any type of interferometer as e.g. Mach-Zehnders, Michelson, Ring Resontaors but also devices with a wavelength-dependent insertion loss as e.g multiplexers as Arrayed-Waveguide gratings or Echelle gratings. Further the device might be used to couple multiple cavities together, as e.g. three or four cavities.
All such variations are considered to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/063685 | 6/18/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62014930 | Jun 2014 | US |