22 research outputs found

    On-chip infrared sensors: redefining the benefits of scaling

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    Infrared (IR) spectroscopy is widely recognized as a gold standard technique for chemical and biological analysis. Traditional IR spectroscopy relies on fragile bench-top instruments located in dedicated laboratory settings, and is thus not suitable for emerging field-deployed applications such as in-line industrial process control, environmental monitoring, and point-of-care diagnosis. Recent strides in photonic integration technologies provide a promising route towards enabling miniaturized, rugged platforms for IR spectroscopic analysis. It is therefore attempting to simply replace the bulky discrete optical elements used in conventional IR spectroscopy with their on-chip counterparts. This size down-scaling approach, however, cripples the system performance as both the sensitivity of spectroscopic sensors and spectral resolution of spectrometers scale with optical path length. In light of this challenge, we will discuss two novel photonic device designs uniquely capable of reaping performance benefits from microphotonic scaling. We leverage strong optical and thermal confinement in judiciously designed micro-cavities to circumvent the thermal diffusion and optical diffraction limits in conventional photothermal sensors and achieve a record 104 photothermal sensitivity enhancement. In the second example, an on-chip spectrometer design with the Fellgett's advantage is analyzed. The design enables sub-nm spectral resolution on a millimeter-sized, fully packaged chip without moving parts.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Award 1506605)United States. Department of Energy (Grant DE-NA0002509

    Broadband repeatable <0.025 dB average loss rapid adiabatic based 3-dB coupler in a 45 nm SOI CMOS process

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    We demonstrate a 75 µm-long rapid adiabatic coupler (RAC) with an average insertion loss <0.025 dB/coupler and an average power splitting ratio of 50±1.09% over 40 nm bandwidth and 68 reticles across a 300 mm 45 nm SOI CMOS wafer.Accepted manuscrip

    Chalcogenide Glass-on-Graphene Photonics

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    Two-dimensional (2-D) materials are of tremendous interest to integrated photonics given their singular optical characteristics spanning light emission, modulation, saturable absorption, and nonlinear optics. To harness their optical properties, these atomically thin materials are usually attached onto prefabricated devices via a transfer process. In this paper, we present a new route for 2-D material integration with planar photonics. Central to this approach is the use of chalcogenide glass, a multifunctional material which can be directly deposited and patterned on a wide variety of 2-D materials and can simultaneously function as the light guiding medium, a gate dielectric, and a passivation layer for 2-D materials. Besides claiming improved fabrication yield and throughput compared to the traditional transfer process, our technique also enables unconventional multilayer device geometries optimally designed for enhancing light-matter interactions in the 2-D layers. Capitalizing on this facile integration method, we demonstrate a series of high-performance glass-on-graphene devices including ultra-broadband on-chip polarizers, energy-efficient thermo-optic switches, as well as graphene-based mid-infrared (mid-IR) waveguide-integrated photodetectors and modulators

    A packaged, fiber-coupled waveguide-enhanced Raman spectroscopic sensor

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    Waveguide-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (WERS) is a promising technique for sensitive and selective detection of chemicals in a compact chip-scale platform. Coupling light on and off the sensor chip with fibers however presents challenges because of the fluorescence and Raman background generated by the pump light in the fibers; as a result all WERS demonstrations to date have used free-space coupling via lenses. We report a packaged, fiber-bonded WERS chip that filters the background on-chip through collection of the backscattered Raman light. The packaged sensor is integrated in a ruggedized flow cell for reliable measurement over arbitrary time periods. We also derive the figures of merit for WERS sensing with the backscattered Raman signal and compare waveguide geometries with respect to their filtering performance and signal to noise ratio. ©2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

    Are slot and sub-wavelength grating waveguides better than strip waveguides for sensing?

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    The unique ability of slot and sub-wavelength grating (SWG) waveguides to confine light outside of the waveguide core material has attracted significant interest in their application to chemical and biological sensing. However, high sensitivity to sidewall roughness induced scattering loss in these structures compared to strip waveguides casts doubt on their efficacy. In this article, we seek to settle the controversy for silicon-on- insulator (SOI) photonic devices by quantitatively comparing the sensing performance of various waveguide geometries through figures of merit that we derive for each mode of sensing. These methods (which may be readily applied to other material systems) take into account both modal confinement and roughness scattering loss, the latter of which is computed using a volume-current (Green’s-function) method with a first Born approximation. For devices based on the standard 220 nm SOI platform at telecommu- nication wavelengths ( λ = 1550 nm) whose propagation loss is predominantly limited by random line-edge sidewall roughness scattering, our model predicts that properly engineered TM-polarized strip waveguides claim the best performance for refractome- try and absorption spectroscopy, while optimized slot waveguides demonstrate > 5 × performance enhancement over the other waveguide geometries for waveguide-enhanced Raman spectroscopy.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (ward No. 1709212)United States. Army Research Office (contract number W911NF-13-D-0001

    On-Chip Infrared Spectroscopic Sensing: Redefining The Benefits Of Scaling

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    Infrared (IR) spectroscopy is widely recognized as a gold standard technique for chemical analysis. Recent strides in photonic integration technologies offer a promising route towards enabling miniaturized, rugged platforms for IR spectroscopic analysis. Here we show that simple size scaling by replacing bulky discrete optical elements used in conventional IR spectroscopy with their on-chip counterparts is not a viable route for on-chip infrared spectroscopic sensing, as it cripples the system performance due to the limited optical path length accessible on a chip. In this context, we discuss two novel photonic sensor designs uniquely suited for microphotonic integration. We leverage strong optical and thermal confinement in judiciously designed microcavities to circumvent the thermal diffusion and optical diffraction limits in conventional photothermal sensors and achieve parts-per-billion level gas molecule limit of detection. In the second example, an on-chip spectrometer design with Fellgett\u27s advantage is proposed for the first time. The design enables sub-nm spectral resolution on a millimeter-sized, fully packaged chip without mechanical moving parts

    Thermal Conductivity Of Chalcogenide Glasses Measured By Raman Spectroscopy

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    We review the potential and limitations of a temperature-dependent Raman Scattering Technique (RST) as a nondestructive optical tool to investigate the thermal properties of bulk Chalcogenide Glasses (ChGs). Conventional thermal conductivity measurement techniques employed for bulk materials cannot be readily extended to thin films created from the parent bulk. This work summarizes the state of the art, and discusses the possibility to measure more accurately the thermal conductivity of bulk ChGs with micrometer resolution using RST. Using this information, we aim to extend the method to measure the thermal conductivity on thin films. While RST has been employed to evaluate the thermal conductivity data of 2D materials such as graphene, molybdenum disulfide, carbon nanotubes and silicon, it has not been used to effectively duplicate data on ChGs which have been measured by traditional measurement tools. The present work identifies and summarizes the limitations of using RST to measure the thermal conductivity on ChGs. In this technique, the temperature of a laser spot was monitored using Raman Scattering Spectra, and efforts were made to measure the thermal conductivity of bulk AMTIR 1 (Ge33As12Se55) and Ge32.5As10Se57.5 ChGs by analyzing heat diffusion equations. To validate the approach, another conventional technique - Transient Plane Source (TPS) has been used for assessing the thermal conductivity of these bulk glasses. Extension to other more complicated materials (glass ceramics) where signatures from both the glassy matrix and crystallites, are discussed

    High-performance and scalable on-chip digital Fourier transform spectroscopy

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    On-chip spectrometers typically have limited spectral channels and low signal to noise ratios. Here the authors introduce a digital architecture that uses switches to change the interferometer path lengths, enabling exponentially more spectral channels per circuit element and lower noise by leveraging a machine learning reconstruction algorithm

    Integrated photonics for infrared spectroscopic sensing

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    Infrared (IR) spectroscopy is widely recognized as a gold standard technique for chemical analysis. Traditional IR spectroscopy relies on fragile bench-Top instruments located in dedicated laboratory settings, and is thus not suitable for emerging field-deployed applications such as in-line industrial process control, environmental monitoring, and point-ofcare diagnosis. Recent strides in photonic integration technologies provide a promising route towards enabling miniaturized, rugged platforms for IR spectroscopic analysis. Chalcogenide glasses, the amorphous compounds containing S, Se or Te, have stand out as a promising material for infrared photonic integration given their broadband infrared transparency and compatibility with silicon photonic integration. In this paper, we discuss our recent work exploring integrated chalcogenide glass based photonic devices for IR spectroscopic chemical analysis, including on-chip cavityenhanced chemical sensing and monolithic integration of mid-IR waveguides with photodetectors
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