A low power Mach-Zehnder interferometer thermo-optic switch using free-standing silicon-on-insulator strip waveguides is demonstrated. The air gap provides thermal isolation between the waveguide interferometer arms and the underlying silicon substrate. The highly confined optical modes of the strip waveguides enable miniature heated cross-sections. The heating efficiency from on-chip resistive heaters is enhanced. Measurements of fabricated devices using 100 microm arm lengths at 1550 nm wavelength result in a switching power of 540 microW, a 10% - 90% switching rise time of 141 micros, and an extinction ratio of 25 dB.
Perfectly vertical grating couplers have various applications in optical I/O such as connector design, coupling to multicore optical fibers and multilayer silicon photonics. However, it is challenging to achieve perfectly vertical coupling without simultaneously increasing reflection. In this paper, we use the adjoint method as well as an adjoint-inspired methodology to design devices that can be fabricated using only a single-etch step in a c-Si 193 nm DUV immersion lithography process, while maintaining good coupling and low reflection. Wafer-level testing of devices fabricated by a pilot line foundry confirms that both design paradigms result in state-of-the-art experimental insertion loss (<2 dB) and bandwidths (∼20 nm) while having only moderate in-band reflection (<−10 dB). Our best design has a (median) 1.82 dB insertion loss and 21.3 nm 1 dB-bandwidth.
The continued convergence of electronics and photonics on the chip scale can benefit from the voltage control of optical polarization for applications in communications, signal processing and sensing. It is challenging, however, to electrically manipulate the polarization state of light in planar optical waveguides. Here we introduce out-of-plane optical waveguides, allowing access to Berry's phase, a quantum-mechanical phenomenon of purely topological origin. As a result, electrically tunable optical polarization rotation on the chip scale is achieved. Devices fabricated in the silicon-on-insulator material platform are not limited to a single static polarization state. Rather, they can exhibit dynamic tuning of polarization from the fundamental transverse electric mode to the fundamental transverse magnetic mode. Electrical tuning of optical polarization over a 19 dB range of polarization extinction ratio is demonstrated with less than 1 dB of conversion loss at infrared wavelengths. Compact system architectures involving dynamic control of optical polarization in integrated circuits are envisioned.
We demonstrate coupling from tapered optical fibers to 450 nm by 250 nm silicon strip waveguides using compact cantilever couplers. The couplers consist of silicon inverse width tapers embedded within silicon dioxide cantilevers. Finite difference time domain simulations are used to design the length of the silicon inverse width taper to as short as 6.5 μm for a cantilever width of 2 μm. Modeling of various strip waveguide taper profiles shows reduced coupling losses for a quadratic taper profile. Infrared measurements of fabricated devices demonstrate average coupling losses of 0.62 dB per connection for the quasi-TE mode and 0.50 dB per connection for the quasi-TM mode across the optical telecommunications C band. In the wavelength range from 1477 nm to 1580 nm, coupling losses for both polarizations are less than 1 dB per connection. The compact, broadband, and low-loss coupling scheme enables direct access to photonic integrated circuits on an entire chip surface without the need for dicing or cleaving the chip.
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