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1.
Opt Lett ; 47(23): 6081-6084, 2022 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37219177

ABSTRACT

Optical phased arrays (OPAs) with phase-monitoring and phase-control capabilities are necessary for robust and accurate beamforming applications. This paper demonstrates an on-chip integrated phase calibration system where compact phase interrogator structures and readout photodiodes are implemented within the OPA architecture. This enables phase-error correction for high-fidelity beam-steering with linear complexity calibration. A 32-channel OPA with 2.5-µm pitch is fabricated in an Si-SiN photonic stack. The readout is done with silicon photon-assisted tunneling detectors (PATDs) for sub-bandgap light detection with no-process change. After the model-based calibration procedure, the beam emitted by the OPA exhibits a sidelobe suppression ratio (SLSR) of -11 dB and a beam divergence of 0.97° × 0.58° at 1.55-µm input wavelength. Wavelength-dependent calibration and tuning are also performed, allowing full 2D beam steering and arbitrary pattern generation with a low complexity algorithm.

2.
Nanotechnology ; 32(47)2021 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34388743

ABSTRACT

Focused ion beam (FIB) technology has become a promising technique in micro- and nano-prototyping due to several advantages over its counterparts such as direct (maskless) processing, sub-10 nm feature size, and high reproducibility. Moreover, FIB machining can be effectively implemented on both conventional planar substrates and unconventional curved surfaces such as optical fibers, which are popular as an effective medium for telecommunications. Optical fibers have also been widely used as intrinsically light-coupled substrates to create a wide variety of compact fiber-optic devices by FIB milling diverse micro- and nanostructures onto the fiber surface (endfacet or outer cladding). In this paper, the broad applications of the FIB technology in optical fibers are reviewed. After an introduction to the technology, incorporating the FIB system and its basic operating modes, a brief overview of the lab-on-fiber technology is presented. Furthermore, the typical and most recent applications of the FIB machining in optical fibers for various applications are summarized. Finally, the reviewed work is concluded by suggesting the possible future directions for improving the micro- and nanomachining capabilities of the FIB technology in optical fibers.

3.
Opt Express ; 28(15): 22899-22907, 2020 Jul 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32752543

ABSTRACT

A high performance compact silicon photonics polarization splitter is proposed and demonstrated. The splitter is based on an asymmetric directional coupler. High extinction ratios at the through and drop ports of the polarization splitter are achieved by using an on-chip TE-pass polarizer and a TM-pass polarizer, respectively. The splitter, implemented on a silicon-on-insulator platform with a 220 nm-thick silicon device layer, has a measured insertion loss lower than 1 dB (for both TE and TM modes) and extinction ratio greater than 25 dB (for TM mode) and greater than 36 dB (for TE mode), in the wavelength range from 1.5 µm to 1.6 µm. The footprint of the device is 12 µm × 15 µm.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 122(38): 7768-7773, 2018 Sep 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30008220

ABSTRACT

The wetting behavior of homogeneous systems is now well understood at the macroscopic scale. However, this understanding offers little predictive power regarding wettability when mesoscopic chemical and morphological heterogeneities come into play. The fundamental interest in the effect of heterogeneity on wettability is derived from its high technological relevance in several industries, including the petroleum industry where wettability is recognized as a key determinant of the overall efficiency of the water-flooding-based enhanced oil recovery process. Here, we demonstrate the use of the atomic force microscopy force curve measurements to distinguish the roles of chemistry and morphology in the wetting properties of rock formations, thus providing a clear interpretation and deeper insight into the wetting behavior of heterogeneous formations. Density functional theory calculations further prove the versatility of our approach by establishing benchmarks on ideal surfaces that differ in chemistry and morphology in a predefined manner.

5.
Opt Express ; 26(24): 31850-31860, 2018 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30650764

ABSTRACT

A high-performance integrated silicon TE-pass polarizer is proposed and demonstrated. The polarizer uses a series of adiabatic waveguide bends that yield high extinction ratio for the TM polarization and low insertion loss for the TE polarization, and does not require special materials or complex fabrication steps. The polarizer, implemented on a silicon-on-insulator platform with a 220 nm silicon thickness, is measured to have insertion loss ≤ 0.37 dB (average 0.12 dB) and extinction ratio ≥ 27.6 dB (average 36.0 dB) over a 1.5 µm to 1.6 µm wavelength range, with a footprint of 63 µm × 9.5 µm. The trade-off between the footprint of the polarizer and its performance is established. While the analysis was done for a silicon-on-insulator platform, the concept is applicable to other waveguide geometries and integrated photonic platforms.

6.
Opt Express ; 25(12): 13035-13045, 2017 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28788843

ABSTRACT

A gradient-index optical fiber lens is proposed and fabricated on the tip of a single-mode fiber using focused ion beam milling. Second-order effective medium theory is used to design a gradual change in the fill factor, which ensures a parabolic effective refractive index distribution. The proposed fiber lens design is simulated via the three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain method, and demonstrated through confocal optical measurements. At a wavelength of 1550 nm, the fabricated lenses focus a 10.4 µm mode field diameter exiting the fiber into spot sizes between 3-5 µm, located 4-6 µm away from the fiber tip. Direct coupling into a silicon-on-insulator chip is also demonstrated, where the fabricated gradient-index lens has a coupling efficiency comparable to a commercial lensed fiber.

7.
Appl Opt ; 56(4): 1202-1206, 2017 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28158134

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate a gradient-index (GRIN) optofluidic waveguide using polydimethylsiloxane cured with a radial variation of temperature. The waveguide wraps the microfluidic channel and the GRIN profile localizes the light around it, making the device suitable for evanescent sensing applications. The fabricated waveguide shows good light confinement, with a propagation loss of 1.47 dB/cm at a wavelength of 632.8 nm.

8.
Opt Express ; 24(12): 13489-99, 2016 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27410365

ABSTRACT

A 4-channel time-wavelength optical pulse interleaver is implemented on a silicon chip. The interleaver forms a train of pulses with periodically changing wavelengths by demultiplexing the input pulse train into several wavelength components, delaying these components with respect to each other, and multiplexing them back into a single path. The interleaver is integrated on a silicon chip, with two arrays of microring resonator filters performing multiplexing and demultiplexing, and long sections of silicon waveguides acting as delay lines. The 4-channel interleaver is designed for an input pulse train with 1 GHz repetition rate, and is measured to have 0.35% RMS pulse timing error, insertion loss between 1.6 dB and 5.8 dB in different channels, crosstalk below -24 dB, and 52 nm free spectral range achieved using the Vernier effect.

9.
Sci Rep ; 5: 10633, 2015 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26030351

ABSTRACT

The incorporation of noble metal nanoparticles, displaying localized surface plasmon resonance, in the active area of donor-acceptor bulk-heterojunction organic photovoltaic devices is an industrially compatible light trapping strategy, able to guarantee better absorption of the incident photons and give an efficiency improvement between 12% and 38%. In the present work, we investigate the effect of Au and Ag nanoparticles blended with P3HT: PCBM on the P3HT crystallization dynamics by synchrotron grazing incidence X-ray diffraction. We conclude that the presence of (1) 80 nm Au, (2) mix of 5 nm, 50 nm, 80 nm Au, (3) 40 nm Ag, and (4) 10 nm, 40 nm, 60 nm Ag colloidal nanoparticles, at different concentrations below 0.3 wt% for Au and below 0.1% for Ag in P3HT: PCBM blends, does not affect the behaviour of the blends themselves.

10.
Opt Express ; 20(4): 4454-69, 2012 Feb 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22418205

ABSTRACT

Accurate conversion of wideband multi-GHz analog signals into the digital domain has long been a target of analog-to-digital converter (ADC) developers, driven by applications in radar systems, software radio, medical imaging, and communication systems. Aperture jitter has been a major bottleneck on the way towards higher speeds and better accuracy. Photonic ADCs, which perform sampling using ultra-stable optical pulse trains generated by mode-locked lasers, have been investigated for many years as a promising approach to overcome the jitter problem and bring ADC performance to new levels. This work demonstrates that the photonic approach can deliver on its promise by digitizing a 41 GHz signal with 7.0 effective bits using a photonic ADC built from discrete components. This accuracy corresponds to a timing jitter of 15 fs - a 4-5 times improvement over the performance of the best electronic ADCs which exist today. On the way towards an integrated photonic ADC, a silicon photonic chip with core photonic components was fabricated and used to digitize a 10 GHz signal with 3.5 effective bits. In these experiments, two wavelength channels were implemented, providing the overall sampling rate of 2.1 GSa/s. To show that photonic ADCs with larger channel counts are possible, a dual 20-channel silicon filter bank has been demonstrated.

11.
Opt Express ; 19(1): 306-16, 2011 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21263570

ABSTRACT

We report the fabrication of a reconfigurable wide-band twenty-channel second-order dual filterbank, defined on a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform, with tunable channel spacing and 20 GHz single-channel bandwidth. We demonstrate the precise tuning of eleven (out of the twenty) channels, with a channel spacing of 124 GHz (~1 nm) and crosstalk between channels of about -45 dB. The effective thermo-optic tuning efficiency is about 27 µW/GHz/ring. A single channel of a twenty-channel counter-propagating filterbank is also demonstrated, showing that both propagating modes exhibit identical filter responses. Considerations about thermal crosstalk are also presented. These filterbanks are suitable for on-chip wavelength-division-multiplexing applications, and have the largest-to-date reported number of channels built on an SOI platform.

12.
Opt Express ; 18(21): 22485-96, 2010 Oct 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20941147

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate an all-optical switch based on a waveguide-embedded 1D photonic crystal cavity fabricated in silicon-on-insulator technology. Light at the telecom wavelength is modulated at high-speed by control pulses in the near infrared, harnessing the plasma dispersion effect. The actual absorbed switching power required for a 3 dB modulation depth is measured to be as low as 6 fJ. While the switch-on time is on the order of a few picoseconds, the relaxation time is almost 500 ps and limited by the lifetime of the charge carriers.

13.
Nat Mater ; 5(2): 93-6, 2006 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16415874

ABSTRACT

Diffraction, a fundamental process in wave physics, leads to spreading of the optical beams as they propagate. However, new photonic crystal (PhC) meta-materials can be nano-engineered to generate extreme anisotropy, resulting in apparent propagation of light without diffraction. This surprising phenomenon, called supercollimation, effectively freezes the spatial width of a light beam inside a PhC, observed over a few isotropic diffraction-lengths. However, using such experiments to predict the behaviour for longer propagation lengths is difficult, as a tiny error in a measured width can extrapolate to order unity uncertainty in the width at distances over hundreds of diffraction-lengths. Here, supercollimation is demonstrated in a macroscopic PhC system over centimetre-scale distances, retaining spatial width confinement without the need for waveguides or nonlinearities. Through quantitative studies of the beam evolution in a two-dimensional PhC, we find that supercollimation possesses unexpected but inherent robustness with respect to short-scale disorder such as fabrication roughness, enabling supercollimation over 600 isotropic diffraction-lengths. The effects of disorder are identified through experiments and understood through rigorous simulations. In addition, a supercollimation steering capability is proposed.

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