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Nanophotonics - The Emergence of a New Paradigm Richard S. Quimby Department of Physics Worcester Polytechnic Institute

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Nanophotonics -. Richard S. Quimby Department of Physics Worcester Polytechnic Institute. The Emergence of a New Paradigm. Outline. 1. Overview: Photonics vs. Electronics 2. Fiber Optics: transmitting information 3. Integrated Optics: processing information - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nanophotonics -

Nanophotonics -

The Emergence of a New Paradigm

Richard S. QuimbyDepartment of Physics

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Page 2: Nanophotonics -

Outline

1. Overview: Photonics vs. Electronics

2. Fiber Optics: transmitting information

3. Integrated Optics: processing information

4. Photonic Crystals: the new paradigm

5. Implications for Education

Page 3: Nanophotonics -

Electronics Photonics

Tubes & transistors Fiber optics

discreet components1970’s

Integrated circuits

VLSI

Molecular electronics

Planar optical waveguides

Integrated optical circuits

Photonic crystals

1960’s

1980’s

2000’s

1970’s

1980’s

1990’s

decr

easi

ng s

ize

Page 4: Nanophotonics -

Electronics Photonics

f ~ 10 Hz f ~ 10 Hz10 15

wirefiber

sig in sig out

v ~ 10 m/s v ~ 10 m/selecphot

control beam

Strong elec-elec interaction Weak phot-phot interaction

58

Page 5: Nanophotonics -

Advantages of Fiber Optic Communications

* Immunity to electrical interference-- aircraft, military, security

* Cable is lightweight, flexible, robust-- efficient use of space in conduits

* Higher data rates over longer distances-- more “bandwidth” for internet traffic

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Page 8: Nanophotonics -
Page 9: Nanophotonics -

Erbium Doped Fiber Amplifiers

* Compatible with transmission fibers

* No polarization dependence

* Little cross-talk between channels

* Bit-rate and format transparent

* Allows wavelength multiplexing (WDM)

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

* Limited wavelength range for amplification

Page 10: Nanophotonics -

After Miniscalco, in Rare Earth Doped Fiber Lasers and Amplifiers, M. Digonnet ed.,( Marcel Dekker 1993)

Erbium doped glass

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fibe

r at

tenu

atio

n

wavelength

after Jeff Hecht, Understanding Fiber Optics, (Prentice-Hall, 1999)

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Raman fiber amplifier

h

h

hf

pump

scattered

vibration

Signal in Signal out

* amplification by stimulated scattering

* nonlinear process: requires high pump power

Page 14: Nanophotonics -

• Can choose pump for desired spectral gain region

• typical gain bandwidth is 30-40 nm (~5 THz)

• gain efficiency is quite low (~0.027 dB/mW)

• compare gain efficiency of EDFA (~5 dB/mW)

• need high pump power (~1 W in single-mode fiber)

• need long interaction lengths: distributed amplification

Raman amplifier gain spectrum

Page 15: Nanophotonics -

Wavelength Division Multiplexing

Page 16: Nanophotonics -
Page 17: Nanophotonics -

Information capacity of fiber

Spectral efficiency = (bit rate)/(channel spacing)

In C-band (1530 < < 1560 nm), f ~ 3800 GHz

Compare: for all radio, TV, microwave, f 1 GHz

Max data rate in fiber = (0.1)(3800 GHz) = 380 Gbs

# phone calls = (380 Gb/s) / (64 kbs/call) ~ 6 million calls

Spectral efficiency can be as high as 0.8 bps/Hz

= (BR)/(10 BR) = 0.1 bps/Hz [conservative]

L-band and S-band increase capacity further

Page 18: Nanophotonics -
Page 19: Nanophotonics -

Fiber Bragg Gratings

Periodic index of refraction modulation inside core of optical fiber:

Strong reflection when = m(/2)

Applications: • WDM add/drop

• mirrors for fiber laser

• wavelength stabilization/control for diode and fiber lasers

Page 20: Nanophotonics -

How to make fiber gratings:

or:

Page 21: Nanophotonics -

Using fiber Bragg gratings for WDM

Page 22: Nanophotonics -

Other ways to separate wavelengths for WDM

Or, can use a blazed diffraction grating to spatially disperse the light:

Page 23: Nanophotonics -

The increasing importance of integrated optics

* Electronic processing speed ~ 2 (Moore’s Law)

* Optical fiber bit rate capacity ~ 2

* Electronic memory access speed ~ (1.05)

Soon our capacity to send information over optical fibers will outstrip our ability to switch, process, or otherwise control that information.

t/(18 mo.)

t/(10 mo.)

t/(12 mo.)

Page 24: Nanophotonics -

Advantages of Integrated-Optic Circuits:

• Small size, low power consumption

• Efficiency and reliability of batch fabrication

• Higher speed possible (not limited by inductance, capacitance)

• parallel optical processing possible (WDM)

Substrate platform type:

• Hybrid -- (near term, use existing technology)

• Monolithic -- (long term, ultimately cheaper, more reliable)

• quartz, LiNbO , Si, GaAs, other III-V semiconductors

Page 25: Nanophotonics -

Challenges for all-optical circuits

• High propagation loss (~1 dB/cm, compared with ~1 dB/km for optical fiber)

• coupling losses going from fiber to waveguide

• photons interact weakly with other photons -- need large (cm scale) interaction lengths

• difficult to direct light around sharp bends (using conventional waveguiding methods)

• electronics-based processing is a moving target

Page 26: Nanophotonics -

Recent progress toward monolithic platform

• Recently developed by Motorola (2001)

• strontium titanate layer relieves strain from 4.1% lattice mismatch between Si and GaAs

• good platform for active devices (diode lasers, amps)

Silicon monolithic platform

Strontium titanate layer

GaAs devices

Page 27: Nanophotonics -

Light modulation in lithium niobate integrated optic circuit

From Jeff Hecht, Understanding Fiber Optics (Prentice Hall 1999)

Page 28: Nanophotonics -

after Jeff Hecht, Understanding Fiber Optics (Prentice Hall 1999)

Arrayed Waveguide Grating for WDM

* Optical path length difference depends on wavelength

* silica-on-silicon waveguide platform

* good coupling between silica waveguide and silica fiber

Page 29: Nanophotonics -

after Jeff Hecht, Understanding Fiber Optics (Prentice Hall 1999)

Echelle gratings as alternative for WDM

* advances in reactive-ion etching (vertical etched facets)

* use silica-on-silicon platform

* smaller size than arrayed-waveguide grating

* allows more functionality on chip

Page 30: Nanophotonics -

Confinement of light by index guiding

higher indexcore

lower indexcladding

lower indexcladding

• need high index difference for confinement around tight bends

• index difference is limited in traditional waveguides

• limited bending radius achieved in practice

-- thermal diffusion of Ti (n~ 0.025)

-- ion exchange (p for Li) (n~ 0.15)

-- ion implantation (n~ 0.02)

Examples for Lithium Niobate:

Page 31: Nanophotonics -

Photonic crystals: the new paradigm

• light confinement by photonic band-gap (PBG)

• no light propagation in PBG “cladding” material

• index of “core” can be lower than that of “cladding”

• light transmitted through “core” with high efficiency even around tight bends

Page 32: Nanophotonics -

Modified spontaneous emission

• First discussed by Purcell (1946) for radiating atoms in microwave cavities

• decay rate #modes/(vol•f)

• if there are no available photon modes, spontaneous emission is “turned off”

• more efficient LED’s, “no-threshold” lasers

• modify angular distribution of emitted light

Page 33: Nanophotonics -

Photonic Bandgap (PBG) Concept

e

Electron moving through array of atoms in a solid

ener

gy bandgap

Photon moving through array of dielectric objects in a solid

Page 34: Nanophotonics -

Early history of photonic bandgaps

• Proposed independently by Yablonovitch (1987) and John (1987)

• trial-and-error approach yielded “pseudo-PBG” in FCC lattice

• Iowa State Univ. group (Ho) showed theoretically that diamond structure (tetrahedral) should exhibit full PBG

• first PBG structure demonstrated experimentally by Yablonovitch (1991) [holes drilled in dielectric: known now as “yablonovite”]

• RPI group (Haus, 1992) showed that FCC lattice does give full PBG, but at higher photon energy

Page 35: Nanophotonics -

Intuitive picture of PBG

After Yablonovitch, Scientific American Dec. 2001

Page 36: Nanophotonics -

First PBG material: yablonovite

After Yablonivitch, www.ee.ucla.edu/~pbmuri/

require n > 1.87

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Possible PBG structures

after Yablonovitch, Scientific American Dec. 2001

Page 38: Nanophotonics -

Prospects for 3-D PBG structures

• Difficult to make (theory ahead of experiment) top down approach: controllable, not easily

scaleable

bottom up approach (self-assembly): not as controllable, but easily scaleable

• Naturally occuring photonic crystals (but not full PBG) butterfly wings hairs of sea mouse opals (also can be synthesized)

Page 39: Nanophotonics -

Photonic bandgap in 2-D

• Fan and Joannopoulos (MIT), 1997 planar waveguide geometry

can use same thin-film technology that is currently used for integrated circuits

theoretical calculations only so far

• Knight, Birks, and Russell (Univ. of Bath, UK), 1999 optical fiber geometry

use well-developed technology for silica-based optical fibers

experimental demonstrations

Page 40: Nanophotonics -

2-D Photonic Crystals

After Joannopuolos, Photonic Crystals: Molding the flow of light, (Princeton Univ. Press, 1995)

Page 41: Nanophotonics -

Propagation along line defect

light in

light out

after Mekis et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 3787 (1996)

• defect: remove dielectric material

• analogous to line of F-centers (atom vacancies) for electronic defect

• E field confined to region of defect, cannot propagate in rest of material

• high transmission, even around 90 degree bend

• light confined to plane by usual index waveguiding

Page 42: Nanophotonics -

Optical confinement at point defect

after Joannopoulos, jdj.mit.edu/

• defect: remove single dielectric unit

• analogous to single F-center (atom vacancy) for electronic defect

• very high-Q cavity resonance

• strongly modifies emission from atoms inside cavity

• potential for low-threshold lasers

Page 43: Nanophotonics -

Photonic Crystal Fibers

after Birks, Opt. Lett. 22, 961 (1997)

• “holey” fiber

• stack rods & tubes, draw down into fiber

• variety of patterns, hole width/spacing ratio

• guiding by:

- effective index

- PBG

Page 44: Nanophotonics -

Small-core holey fiberafter Knight, Optics & Photonics News, March 2002

• effective index of “cladding” is close to that of air (n=1)

• anomalous dispersion (D>0) over wide range, including visible (enables soliton transmission)

• can taylor zero-dispersion for phase-matching in non-linear optical processes (ultrabroad supercontinuum)

Page 45: Nanophotonics -

Large-core holey fiber

d

V = a n - n2

2 2core clad

after Knight, Optics & Photonics News, March 2002

• effective index of “cladding” increases at shorter • results in V value which becomes nearly independent of • single mode requires V<2.405 (“endlessly single-mode”)

• single-mode for wide range of core sizes

Page 46: Nanophotonics -

Holey fiber with hollow core

after Knight, Science 282, 1476 (1998)

• air core: the “holey” grail

• confinement by PBG

• first demonstrated in honeycomb structure

• only certain wavelengths confined by PBG

• propagating mode takes on symmetry of photonic crystal

Page 47: Nanophotonics -

Holey fiber with large hollow core

after Knight, Optics & Photonics News, March 2002

• high power transmission without nonlinear optical effects (light mostly in air)

• losses now ~1 dB/m (can be lower than index-guiding fiber, in principle)

• small material dispersion

Special applications:

• guiding atoms in fiber by optical confinement

• nonlinear interactions in gas-filled air holes

Page 48: Nanophotonics -

Implications for education

• fundamentals are important

• physics is good background for adapting to new technology

• photonics is blurring boundaries of traditional disciplines

At WPI:

- new courses in photonics, lasers, nanotechnology

- new IPG Photonics Laboratory (Olin Hall 205)

integrate into existing courses

developing new laboratory course

Page 49: Nanophotonics -

Prospects for nanophotonics

after Dowling, home.earthlink.net/~jpdowling/pbgbib.html

after Joannopoulos, jdj.mit.edu/