3 research outputs found
Doubly resonant photonic crystal cavity using merged bound states in the continuum
In this work, a doubly resonant photonic crystal (PhC) cavity using the
merged bound states in the continuum (BICs) is proposed to obtain a higher
second harmonic generation (SHG) efficiency. Firstly by scanning geometry
parameters the accidental BICs and a band-edge mode outside the light cone can
be obtained. Then as the lattice constant or the thickness of the slab is
adjusted the accidental BICs will merge. A supercell with large and small holes
is constructed and the band-edge mode outside the light cone can be
mode-matched with the merged BICs mode. Finally the heterostructure PhC cavity
is designed. The merged BICs show a high quality factor for the photonic
crystal with finite size. Consequently, the SHG efficiency of the lattice
constant near merged BICs of ~6000% W-1 is higher than the one of the isolated
BIC
Quasi-phase-matching with Spontaneous Domain Inversion in an Integrated Lithium Niobate Micro-racetrack Resonator
Quasi-phase-matching (QPM) technology is the most popular and significant
method to achieve efficient nonlinear frequency conversion. The realization of
periodically poling to achieve QPM in photonic integrated circuits (PICs) is a
challenging issue for the requirement of CMOS compatible and large-scale
fabrication. Here we realize a spontaneous periodical domain inversion without
poling but by dispersion engineering and designing the orientation of the
crystal due to the circular propagation of light waves in an integrated lithium
niobate micro-racetrack resonator (MRR). The QPM second harmonic generation
(SHG) with a normalized conversion efficiency of 2.25/W (169th-order QPM)
has been achieved in the high-quality factor resonator of with
the straight waveguide (TE mode) of ultra-low propagation loss of
0.0022dB/cm. The efficiency can be further enhanced by using a first-order QPM,
and the bandwidth can be made broader by employing a shorter interaction length
for photonics and quantum optics. The configurable spontaneous
quasi-phase-matching lithium niobate MRR on X-cut thin-film lithium niobate on
insulator (LNOI) provides a significant on-chip integrated platform for other
optical parametric processes