This application relates generally to optical communications networks, and more specifically to a method and apparatus for reducing the polarization dependent loss from diffraction gratings used in such communications networks.
The Internet and data communications are causing an explosion in the global demand for bandwidth. Fiber optic telecommunications systems are currently deploying a relatively new technology called dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) to expand the capacity of new and existing optical fiber systems to help satisfy this demand. In DWDM, multiple wavelengths of light simultaneously transport information through a single optical fiber. Each wavelength operates as an individual channel carrying a stream of data. The carrying capacity of a fiber is multiplied by the number of DWDM channels used. Today, DWDM systems using up to 80 channels are available from multiple manufacturers, with more promised in the future.
Optical wavelength routing functions often use demultiplexing of a light stream into its many individual wavelengths, which are then optically directed along different paths. Subsequently, different wavelength signals may then be multiplexed into a common pathway. Within such routing devices, the optical signals are routed between the common and individual optical pathways by a combination of dispersion and focusing mechanisms. The focusing mechanism forms discrete images of the common pathway in each wavelength of the different optical signals and the dispersion mechanism relatively displaces the images along a focal line by amounts that vary with the signal wavelength.
Both phased arrays and reflection diffraction gratings may be used to perform the dispersing functions. While phased arrays are adequate when the number of channels carrying different wavelength signals is small, reflection diffraction gratings are generally preferable when large numbers of channels are used. However, reflection diffraction gratings tend to exhibit greater polarization sensitivity and since the polarization of optical signals often fluctuates in optical communication systems, this sensitivity may result in large variations in transmission efficiency. Loss of information is possible unless compensating amplification of the signals is used to maintain adequate signal-to-noise ratios. Although polarization sensitivity may generally be mitigated by increasing the grating pitch of the reflection grating, limitations on the desired wavelength dispersion for signals at optical telecommunication wavelengths preclude an increase in grating pitch sufficient to achieve high diffraction efficiency in all polarization directions.
Suggestions to reduce polarization dependent losses in optical switching systems have included complex polarization splitting and recombination techniques, such as described in WO 98/35251, published Aug. 13, 1998. In the method described therein, an optical beam is separated into distinct subbeams for different polarization states and optically constrained to follow different paths, which ultimately converge so that the subbeams may be recombined. Creating and maintaining separate optical paths requires additional components and increases both the cost and complexity of the devices that use the method. Furthermore, the recombination of the subbeams requires very precise alignment of the optical components to prevent the introduction of spurious distortion resulting from imperfect recombination.
It is thus desirable to provide a method and apparatus that reduces or eliminates polarization dependent loss from diffraction gratings used in optical telecommunications systems without requiring beams with different polarization states to follow different optical paths.
Embodiments of the invention thus exploit a discovery of the inventor relating to polarization rotation of light beams in certain optical configurations. A wavelength router made in accordance with embodiments of the invention receives light having a plurality of spectral bands at an input port. Subsets of these spectral bands are directed to respective ones of a plurality of output ports. The wavelength router includes an optical train and a routing mechanism. The optical train is disposed between the input port and output ports. It provides optical paths for routing the spectral bands and includes a wave plate for rotating polarization components and a dispersive element disposed to intercept light traveling from the input port. In one embodiment, the optical train is configured so that light encounters the dispersive element and the wave plate twice before reaching any of the output ports. The routing mechanism has at least one dynamically configurable routing element to direct a given spectral band to different output ports depending on its state.
The inventor has discovered that certain properties of the wave plate may be chosen to reduce or eliminate polarization dependent loss depending on the number of reflections used by the dynamically configurable routing element to effect its routing. If the number of reflections is odd, polarization dependent loss may be eliminated with a quarter-wave plate having a fast axis oriented substantially at an odd multiple of 45° with respect to a polarization axis of the spectral bands. In a specific such embodiment, the number of reflections used by the dynamically configurable routing element is three. If the number of reflections is instead even, polarization dependent loss may be eliminated with a half-wave plate having a fast axis oriented substantially at an odd multiple of 22.5° with respect to a polarization axis of the spectral bands.
Just as the routing mechanism may be configured in a variety of ways to effect different numbers of reflections of the spectral bands, so too can the optical train be configured in a variety of ways to effect the desired routing. In one embodiment, the dispersive element comprises a reflection grating and the optical train further includes a lens. Light coming from the input port is collimated by the lens and dispersed by the reflection grating as a plurality of angularly separated beams corresponding to the spectral bands. The angularly separated beams are focused by the lens on respective dynamically configurable routing elements. The wave plate is disposed between the reflection grating and the routing mechanism; in some embodiments, it is between the lens and the reflection grating, while in other embodiments, it is between the lens and the routing mechanism.
In another embodiment, the dispersive element comprises a transmissive grating and the optical train further includes first and second lenses. Light coming from the input port is collimated by the first lens and dispersed by the transmissive grating as a plurality of angularly separated beams corresponding to the spectral bands. The angularly separated beams are focused by the second lens on respective dynamically configurable routing elements comprised by the routing mechanism. The wave plate is disposed between the transmissive grating and the routing mechanism; in some embodiments, it is between the transmissive grating and the second lens, while in other embodiments, it is between the second lens and the routing mechanism.
In a further embodiment, the dispersive element comprises a reflection grating and the optical train further includes a curved reflector. The curved reflector is disposed to intercept light from the input port, to collimate the intercepted light, and direct the collimated light toward the reflection grating. The curved reflector then intercepts light reflected from the reflection grating, focuses the light and directs the focused light on respective dynamically configurable routing elements comprised by the routing mechanism.
A further understanding of the nature and advantages of the present invention may be realized by reference to the remaining portions of the specification and the drawings wherein like reference labels are used throughout the several drawings to refer to similar components. In some instances, a sublabel is associated with a reference numeral and is enclosed in parentheses to denote one of multiple similar components. When reference is made to a reference numeral without specification to an existing sublabel, it is intended to refer to all such multiple similar components.
1. Introduction
The following description sets forth embodiments of a method and apparatus that reduces or eliminates polarization dependent losses from a diffraction grating. Embodiments of the invention may be used generally in optical telecommunications systems or in other applications where reduction of polarization dependent losses is desirable. In particular embodiments, such polarization dependent losses are reduced or eliminated in a wavelength router to achieve the goals of optical networking systems.
The general functionality of some such optical wavelength routers that can be used with embodiments of the invention is described in detail in the copending, commonly assigned U.S. patent application, filed Nov. 16, 1999 and assigned Ser. No. 09/442,061, entitled “Wavelength Router” (“the '061 application”), which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety, including the Appendix, for all purposes. As described therein, such optical wavelength routers accept light having a plurality of spectral bands at an input port and selectively direct subsets of the spectral bands to desired ones of a plurality of output ports. Light entering such a wavelength router from the input port forms a diverging beam, which includes the different spectral bands. The beam is collimated, such as by a lens or concave mirror, and directed to a diffraction grating that disperses the light so that collimated beams at different wavelengths are directed at different angles. The separated beams are directed to the output ports according to states of dynamically configurable routing elements, which in different embodiments may include different numbers of reflective surfaces.
The reduction in polarization dependent losses achieved by embodiments of the invention translates directly into improved efficiency in operation of the wavelength router. As discussed below, different embodiments are more suitable for optical configurations in which the dynamically configurable routing elements have different numbers of reflective surfaces disposed to be encountered by light beams.
2. Diffraction of Optical Signals
Demultiplexing of an optical signal that contains a plurality of signals at different wavelengths may be accomplished with a diffraction grating with appropriately sized and shaped diffraction grooves. An example of such a demultiplexing diffraction grating is illustrated in
mλ=d(sin α±sin β),
where m is an integral order of interference and d is the grating period. The manner in which incident light will be distributed among the various orders of interference depends on the shape and orientation of the groove sides and on the relation of wavelength to groove separation. When d≦λ, diffraction effects predominate in controlling the intensity distribution among orders, but when d>λ, optical reflection from the sides of the grooves is more strongly involved. Diffraction gratings 100 are manufactured classically with the use of a ruling engine by burnishing grooves with a diamond stylus in a substrate 120 or holographically with the use of interference fringes generated at the intersection of two laser beams.
The efficiency of the diffraction grating depends on the polarization state of the incident light. The electric field E of an arbitrarily polarized incident optical signal may be written as a superposition of two electric fields linearly polarized along two orthogonal axes {circumflex over (x)} and ŷ:
E=Ex{circumflex over (x)}+Eyŷ.
The intensity I0 of the incident signal is defined by the strength of the electric field along the orthogonal directions:
I0=|Ex|2+|Ey|2,
where units have been chosen in which the permittivity of the medium is equal to four times the permeability of the medium to make the remaining derivation more transparent. The efficiency is governed by independent efficiency coefficients ε in the orthogonal polarization directions such that the electric field E′ of the signal reflected by the grating is
E′=−√{square root over (εx)}Ex{circumflex over (x)}−√{square root over (εy)}Ey{circumflex over (y)},
with total intensity
I′=εx|Ex|2+εy|Ey|2.
It is thus evident that the intensity of a signal linearly polarized along one of the two orthogonal axes is reflected by the diffraction grating with an intensity dependent only on the efficiency coefficient for that direction:
Ix=εx|Ex|2
Iy=εy|Ey|2.
For most diffraction gratings, εx≠εy, so there may be large variability in the overall efficiency and resulting polarization-dependent loss as a function of the polarization state of the incident signal.
3. Polarization Rotation
In embodiments of the invention, this variability is reduced or eliminated by imposing a polarization rotation. Such a polarization rotation may be achieved by introducing a wave delay along one polarization component of the electric field. In one embodiment, this may be achieved by using a wave plate, which is constructed asymmetrically so that different indices of refraction are achieved in two orthogonal directions. Thus, when the incident optical signal passes through the wave plate, one component of the electric field is delayed relative to the other. Typically, wave plates are constructed to impose phase differences of π (“half-wave plate”) or π/2 (“quarter-wave plate”). As explained below, the choice and orientation of a suitable wave plate may depend on certain optical characteristics of a particular arrangement. For example, for the wavelength router assemblies, the polarization-dependent loss may be minimized by using a quarter-wave plate or half-wave plate depending on the number of reflective surfaces comprised by the dynamically configurable routing elements.
The effects of retroreflection on the coordinate system are shown in
To account for light polarization states during propagation through an optical assembly, the Jones matrix notation is used for the x and y components, writing the electric field vector as a 1×2 matrix element:
In this notation, certain specific polarization states are written as follows:
The effects of optical elements such as wave plates and reflective surfaces, are represented by 2×2 matrices T that operate on the polarization vector through matrix multiplication. For a given initial state of polarized light E0 represented as a 1×2 matrix and propagating sequentially through a series n of optical elements T1, T2, . . . , Tn, the final polarization matrix Ef is given by
Ef=TnTn−1 . . . T2TiE0,
where Ti corresponds to the matrix representation for optical element Ti. For example, the axes transformation for a single reflection from a reflective surface is summarized as (x, y)→(−x′, y′) so that
For applications having multiple reflections, the following property of TRS is noted:
The optical effect of a wave plate may also be expressed in such a matrix form. Generally, a birefringent wave plate has a polarization-dependent index of refraction. The fast axis and slow axis of the wave plate define the two orthogonal axes of the wave plate with different indices of refraction. Light polarized parallel to the slow axis experiences a phase retardance δ relative to light polarized parallel to the fast axis. Denoting the orientation of the wave plate by angle θ of the fast axis with respect to the x axis, the matrix representation for a generic wave plate is given by
For a half-wave plate, δ=π, and for a quarter-wave plate, δ=π/2.
4. Wavelength Routers
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are provided for wavelength routers, one example of which is illustrated schematically with
Light entering the wavelength router 310 from the input port 312 forms a diverging beam 318, which includes the different spectral bands. The beam 318 encounters a lens 320, which collimates the light and directs it to a reflection diffraction grating 325. The grating 325 disperses the light so that collimated beams at different wavelengths are directed at different angles back towards the lens 320. Two such beams are shown explicitly and denoted 326 and 326′ (the latter drawn in dashed lines). Since these collimated beams encounter the lens 320 at different angles, they are focused at different points along a line 327 in a transverse focal plane. Line 327 extends in the plane of the top view of
The focused beams pass through wave plate 337 and subsequently encounter respective ones of a plurality of retroreflectors, designated 330 (1 . . . N), located near the focal plane. As described below, polarization-dependent loss may be reduced or eliminated with certain configurations of the wave plate 337 depending on the structure of the retroreflectors 330. The beams are directed, as diverging beams, back to the lens 320 after passing again through the wave plate 337. Each retroreflector 330 sends its intercepted beam along a reverse path that may be displaced in a direction perpendicular to line 327. More specifically, the beams are displaced along respective lines 335 (1 . . . N) that extend generally parallel to line 317 in the plane of the side view of
In the particular embodiment shown, the displacement of each beam is effected by moving the position of the retroreflector along its respective line 335(i). In other embodiments, the beam displacement is effected by a reconfiguration of the retroreflector. It is noted that the retroreflectors are shown above the output ports in the plane of
The beams returning from the retroreflectors are collimated by the lens 320 and directed once more to the grating 325. The grating 325, on the second encounter, removes the angular separation between the different beams, and directs the collimated beams back to the lens 320, which focuses the beams. However, due to the possible displacement of each beam by its respective retroreflector, the beams will be focused at possibly different points along line 317. Thus, depending on the positions of the retroreflectors, each beam is directed to one or another of output ports 315 (1 . . . M).
This embodiment is an airspace implementation of a more generic class of what are referred to as free-space embodiments. In some of the other free-space embodiments, to be described below, the various beams are all within a body of glass. The term “free-space” refers to the fact that the light within the body is not confined in the dimensions transverse to propagation, but rather can be regarded as diffracting in these transverse dimensions. Since the second encounter with the dispersive element effectively undoes the dispersion induced by the first encounter, each spectral band exits the router with substantially no dispersion.
In the embodiment illustrated with
where εx and εy are respectively the electric-field efficiencies of horizontally and vertically polarized light. The electric-field vector initially incident on the diffraction grating 325 is written generally as E0=α{circumflex over (x)}+βŷ, where α and β are complex electric-field coefficients. If the retroreflectors 330 have n reflective surfaces, the electric field after sequentially encountering the grating 325 a first time, encountering one of the retroreflectors 330, and encountering the grating 325 a second time, is given by
where the ± corresponds to whether n is even (“+”) or odd (“−”). In either case, the efficiency ε is given by
With no wave plate, the efficiency is a strong function of α and β. Because α and β evolve slowly over time, the efficiency ε is time dependent, varying between the extremes of ε=εx4 (for horizontal polarization where β=0) and ε=εy4 (for vertical polarization where α=0). In the absence of the wave plate, the efficiency is independent of the number of reflective surfaces comprised by the retroreflectors 330.
The efficiency for the arrangement including the wave plate 337 positioned as shown in
If the retroreflectors 330 have n reflective surfaces, the electric field after sequentially encountering the grating 325 a first time, encountering the wave plate 337 a first time, encountering one of the retroreflectors 330, encountering the wave plate a second time, and encountering the grating 325 a second time, is given by
Ef=TgTWP(θ2,δ)TRSnT(θ1,δ)TgE0,
where θ1 and θ2 respectively define the angle of the wave-plate fast axis for the first and second encounters. Some specific embodiments are noted.
First, in one embodiment, the number of reflections n provided by the retroreflector 337 is odd. In this embodiment, the wave plate 337 comprises a quarter wave plate oriented with the fast axis at 45° relative to the x axis so that δ=π/2 and θ1=π/4. For the second pass through the wave plate 337, the angle of the fast axis with respect to the new x axis is θ2=π−π/4=3π/4. Using the fact that for an odd number of reflections, TRSn=TRS, the electric field is given by
The resulting efficiency is independent of the incident electric field E0:
Thus, the presence of a suitably oriented quarter-wave plate for any retroreflector providing an odd number of reflections eliminates polarization-dependent loss. Using the expressions provided above, it is a matter of routine skill to verify that the efficiency ε=εx2εy2 is independent of the initial state of polarization for any angle θ1=mπ/4, where m is an odd integer. Thus, for every such quarter-wave plate configuration where the retroreflectors 330 provide an odd number of reflections, the polarization-dependent loss may be eliminated.
It is noted that where the number of reflections n is even so that TRSn=I, the quarter-wave plate does not eliminate the polarization-dependent loss:
The efficiency ε is the same as without the quarter-wave plate, as shown by calculating the efficiency explicitly for E0=α{circumflex over (x)}+βŷ:
It is instead possible to eliminate the polarization-dependent loss by using a suitably oriented half-wave plate positioned between the grating 325 and the retroreflectors 330, such as in the position shown in
The resulting efficiency is thus independent of the state of polarization of incident electric field E0 and the polarization-dependent loss is eliminated by the two passes through the half-wave plate:
While the above result has been shown explicitly for a half wave plate oriented so that θ1=π/8, it is a matter of routine skill to verify that the efficiency ε=εx2εy2 is independent of the initial state of polarization for any angle θ1=mπ/8, where m is an odd integer. Thus, for every such half-wave plate configuration where the retroreflectors 330 provide an even number of reflections, the polarization-dependent loss may be eliminated.
Experimental verifications have confirmed that the number of reflections that take place within the retroreflectors 330 affect whether a quarter-wave plate or half-wave plate are preferred to eliminate the polarization-dependent loss. Examples of retroreflectors 330 that use an odd number of reflections are provided in copending, commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/941,998, entitled “MULTIMIRROR STACK FOR VERTICAL INTEGRATION OF MEMS DEVICES IN TWO-POSITION RETROREFLECTORS,” filed Aug. 28, 2001 by Frederick Kent Copeland (“the '998 application), the entire disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference for all purposes. Specific examples of retroreflector structures that use three reflections are shown in
Examples of retroreflectors 330 that use an even number of reflections are provided in
The principles of the invention may be used in wavelength routers having a variety of alternative configurations. For example, one alternative embodiment for the wavelength router is shown in
Light entering wavelength router 410 from input port 412 forms a diverging beam 418, which includes the different spectral bands. Beam 418 encounters the first lens 420a, which collimates the light and directs it to the transmissive grating 425. The grating 425 disperses the light so that collimated beams at different wavelengths emerge from the beam and proceed. The collimated beams, one of which is shown, encounter the second lens 420b, which focuses the beams. The focused beams pass through the wave plate 437 and then encounter respective ones of plurality of retroreflectors 430 (1 . . . N), located near the focal plane. Except for the fact that beams are transmitted through the grating 425 rather than reflected, the grating 425 is equivalent to the reflection grating 325 used in the embodiment of
The beams are reflected, and emerge as diverging beams that again pass through the wave plate 437, back to the second lens 420b, are collimated, and directed to the grating 425. The grating 425, on the second encounter, removes the angular separation between the different beams, which are then focused in the plane of output ports 415 (1 . . . M). In the specific implementation, the input port 412, the lens 420a, the grating 425, the lens 420b, and the retroreflectors 430 are spaced at approximately equal intervals, with the two lenses having equal focal lengths and the distance between the input port 412 and the retroreflectors 430 being four times (4×) the focal length. Thus the focal lengths and the relative positions define what is referred to as a “4f relay” between the input port 412 and the retroreflectors 430, and also a 4f relay between the retroreflectors 430 and the Output ports 415. This configuration is not necessary, but is preferred. The optical system is preferably telecentric.
Since the matrix representation for the transmissive grating 425 is the same as the matrix representation for the reflection grating considered above, the preferred choice of which type of wave plate 437 to use depends in a similar fashion on whether the retroreflectors 430 are configured to provide an even or odd number of reflections. If configured for an odd number of reflections, the wave plate 437 preferably comprises a quarter-wave plate having a fast axis oriented at an odd multiple of 450 with respect to one of the polarization axes. If configured for an even number of reflections, the wave plate 437 preferably comprises a half-wave plate with a fast axis oriented at an odd multiple of 22.5° with respect to one of the polarization axes. In certain specific embodiments, the retroreflectors 430 are configured as described in the '061 and/or '998 applications to provide two or three reflections, although other numbers of reflections may be provided with different configurations of the retroreflectors 430.
In still another wavelength-router embodiment, illustrated in
The grating 525 disperses the light so that collimated beams at different wavelengths are directed at different angles back toward the reflector 540. Two such beams are shown explicitly, one in solid lines and one in dashed lines. Since these collimated beams encounter the reflector at different angles, they are focused at different points in a transverse focal plane. The focused beams pass through a wave plate 537 and encounter retroreflectors 530 (1 . . . N) located near the focal plane. The operation in the reverse direction is as described in connection with the embodiments above, and the beams follow the reverse path, which is displaced in a direction perpendicular to the plane of
Since the matrix representation for the grating 525 is the same as the matrix representation for the reflection grating considered in connection with
Still other wavelength-router embodiments that use the wave plate as described above are within the scope of the invention. For example, while the embodiments illustrated in
Having described several alternative embodiments, it will be recognized by those of skill in the art that various other modifications, alternative constructions, and equivalents may be used without departing from the spirit of the invention. Accordingly, the above description should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention, which is defined in the following claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/706,489, entitled “REDUCTION OF POLARIZATION-DEPENDENT LOSS FROM GRATING USED IN DOUBLE-PASS CONFIGURATION,” filed Nov. 3, 2000 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,751,415 by Larry Fabiny, the entire disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference for all purposes.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20020105697 A1 | Aug 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09706489 | Nov 2000 | US |
Child | 10076182 | US |