12 research outputs found
Experimental demonstration of two-dimensional hybrid waveguide-integrated plasmonic crystals on silicon-on-insulator platform
Nanoscale plasmonic structures can offer unique functionality due to extreme sub-wavelength optical confinement, but the realization of complex plasmonic circuits is hampered by high propagation losses. Hybrid approaches can potentially overcome this limitation, but only few practical approaches based on either single or few element arrays of nanoantennas on dielectric nanowire have been experimentally demonstrated. In this paper, we demonstrate a two dimensional hybrid photonic plasmonic crystal interfaced with a standard silicon photonic platform. Off resonance, we observe low loss propagation through our structure, while on resonance we observe strong propagation suppression and intense concentration of light into a dense lattice of nanoscale hot-spots on the surface providing clear evidence of a hybrid photonic plasmonic crystal bandgap. This fully integrated approach is compatible with established silicon-on-insulator (SOI) fabrication techniques and constitutes a significant step toward harnessing plasmonic functionality within SOI photonic circuits
Ridge waveguide couplers with leaky mode resonator-like wavelength responses
Integrated photonic resonators based on bound states in the continuum (BICs) on the silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform have the potential for novel, mass-manufacturable resonant devices. While the nature of BIC-based ridge resonators requires the resonators to be extended in the (axial) propagation direction of the resonant mode, the requirement for excitation from the quasi-continuum extends the resonator structures also in the lateral dimensions, resulting in large device footprints. To overcome this footprint requirement, we investigate the translation of BIC-based ridge resonators into a guided mode system with finite lateral dimensions. We draw analogies between the resulting waveguide system and the BIC-based resonators and numerically demonstrate that, analog to the BIC-based resonators, such a waveguide system can exhibit spectrally narrow-band inversion of its transmissive behavior.Steffen Schoenhardt, Andreas Boes, Thach G. Nguyen, and Arnan Mitchel
Bonding of SU-8 films onto KMPR structures for microfluidic, air-suspended photonic and optofluidic applications
We present a method to bond unstructured and structured SU-8 films down to sub-micron thicknesses onto microchannels fabricated in KMPR using a flexible polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) stamp. By exploiting differently casted PDMS stamps, 3D microfluidic channel networks, air-suspended photonic devices and optofluidic structures have been fabricated. First, microchannels of KMPR are patterned by photolithography and an SU-8 film is spin coated onto a prepared PDMS stamp. The stamp is then placed on top of the KMPR microchannels and the SU-8 layer is cross-linked by applying sufficient heat and pressure. After peeling off the PDMS stamp, the SU-8 layer remains bonded on the KMPR. In our experiments, we demonstrate the bonding of approximately 0.5 ÎŒm thick structured SU-8 films onto KMPR microchannels of about 500 ÎŒm width and 25 ÎŒm height. Bond strength tests demonstrated that such thin layers can withstand pressures up to 1100 hPa. The laminated SU-8 layers can enable various functionalities, e.g. sealing of microfluidic channels, realization of air-suspended photonic structures or optofluidic devices. Most importantly, the combination of fluid handling in the microchannels and air-suspended photonic structures realized in the laminated SU-8 layer enables research towards a large range of applications, such as optofluidics, biosensors, chemical and biomedical analysis, environmental investigations, and renewable energy
Ridge Resonance in Silicon Photonics Harnessing Bound States in the Continuum
The theoretical analysis and experimental demonstration of a waveguide resonator are presented based on bound states in the continuum in an integrated photonic chip platform. The continuum has the form of a collimated beam of light which is confined vertically in a transverse electric (TE) mode of a silicon slab. The bound state is a discrete transverse-magnetic (TM)-like mode of a ridge on the silicon slab. The coupling between the slab and ridge modes results in a single sharp resonance at the wavelength where they phase match. This phenomenon is experimentally demonstrated on a silicon photonic chip using foundry-compatible parameters and it is interfaced on-chip to standard single-mode silicon nanowire waveguides. The fabricated chip exhibits a single sharp resonance near 1550 nm with a line width of a few nanometers, an extinction ratio of 25 dB, and a thermal stability of 19.5 pm °Câ1. It is believed that the demonstration of a resonance operating near a bound state in the continuum realized using guided wave components will form the basis of a new approach to on-chip wavelength filtering and sensing applications
Hybrid waveguide-integrated plasmonic crystals on silicon-on-insulator platform
Waveguide-integrated plasmonic crystals are fabricated and characterized using a hybrid platform consisting of silver nanogap tilings over the surface of a SOI photonic chip. Stop-band and hot-spots of such hybrid plasmonic crystal have been demonstrated
Experimental demonstration of two-dimensional hybrid waveguide-integrated plasmonic crystals on silicon-on-insulator platform
Nanoscale plasmonic structures can offer unique functionality due to extreme sub-wavelength optical confinement, but the realization of complex plasmonic circuits is hampered by high propagation losses. Hybrid approaches can potentially overcome this limitation, but only few practical approaches based on either single or few element arrays of nanoantennas on dielectric nanowire have been experimentally demonstrated. In this paper, we demonstrate a two dimensional hybrid photonic plasmonic crystal interfaced with a standard silicon photonic platform. Off resonance, we observe low loss propagation through our structure, while on resonance we observe strong propagation suppression and intense concentration of light into a dense lattice of nanoscale hot-spots on the surface providing clear evidence of a hybrid photonic plasmonic crystal bandgap. This fully integrated approach is compatible with established silicon-on-insulator (SOI) fabrication techniques and constitutes a significant step toward harnessing plasmonic functionality within SOI photonic circuits
Photochemistry of OIO: Laboratory study and atmospheric implications
Iodine chemistry influences the oxidizing capacity of the atmosphere, principally by depleting ozone, and induces the formation of new particles in the marine boundary layer. The photochemistry of iodine dioxide (OIO) plays a key role in both these processes. Here we report that OIO photolyses in the visible (480â650 nm), yielding iodine atoms with a quantum efficiency of unity (1.07 ± 0.15). As a result, much smaller sources of iodine precursors are required to cause significant ozone depletion, which has important implications for the marine boundary layer ozone budget