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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 23(21)2023 Oct 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37960400

ABSTRACT

Optical microresonators have proven to be especially useful for sensing applications. In most cases, the sensing mechanism is dispersive, where the resonance frequency of a mode shifts in response to a change in the ambient index of refraction. It is also possible to conduct dissipative sensing, in which absorption by an analyte causes measurable changes in the mode linewidth and in the throughput dip depth. If the mode is overcoupled, the dip depth response can be more sensitive than the linewidth response, but overcoupling is not always easy to achieve. We have recently shown theoretically that using multimode input to the microresonator can enhance the dip-depth sensitivity by a factor of several thousand relative to that of single-mode input and by a factor of nearly 100 compared to the linewidth sensitivity. Here, we experimentally confirm these enhancements using an absorbing dye dissolved in methanol inside a hollow bottle resonator. We review the theory, describe the setup and procedure, detail the fabrication and characterization of an asymmetrically tapered fiber to produce multimode input, and present sensing enhancement results that agree with all the predictions of the theory.

2.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(17)2022 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36081068

ABSTRACT

Optical whispering-gallery microresonators have proven to be especially useful as chemical sensors. Most applications involve dispersive sensing, such as the frequency shift of resonator modes in response to a change in the ambient index of refraction. However, the response to dissipative interaction can be even more sensitive than the dispersive response. Dissipative sensing is most often conducted via a change in the mode linewidth owing to absorption in the analyte, but the change in the throughput dip depth of a mode can provide better sensitivity. Dispersive sensing can be enhanced when the input to the microresonator consists of multiple fiber or waveguide modes. Here, we show that multimode input can enhance dip-depth dissipative sensing by an even greater factor. We demonstrate that the multimode-input response relative to single-mode-input response using the same fiber or waveguide can be enhanced by a factor of more than one thousand, independent of the mode linewidth, or quality factor (Q), of the mode. We also show that multimode input makes the dip-depth response nearly one hundred times more sensitive than the linewidth-change response. These enhancement factors are predicted by making only two measurements of dip depth in the absence of an analyte: one with the two input modes in phase with each other, and one with them out of phase.

3.
Opt Lett ; 44(17): 4163-4166, 2019 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31465353

ABSTRACT

Light can couple between two orthogonally polarized whispering-gallery modes of a microresonator; the effect is easily observable when those modes are frequency degenerate, and can result in coupled-mode induced transparency (CMIT). Experimental observations of CMIT show that the cross-polarization coupling (CPC) strength is typically 10-8-10-7 per round trip. It is shown in this Letter that polarization rotation resulting from optical spin-orbit interaction through the experimentally realistic asymmetry of a microresonator about its equator can produce CPC with strengths in the same range as observed in experiments.

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