Single Mode Photonic Circuit Architecture and a New Optical Splitter Design Based on Parallel Waveguide Mode Conversion
The new single mode circuit (SMC) architecture is invented for photonic integrated circuits (PIC). This architecture allows using multimode waveguides or structures to construct a single mode operated PIC. The multimode sections used in such SMC based PIC possess strong lateral confinement so that the PIC can have high circuit density and high optical performance at the same time. A parallel mode converter structure is also invented here. Based on this parallel mode converter, a low loss optical splitter can be constructed for high index contrast waveguide system.
This application claims the benefit and is a Continuation of U.S. Application Ser. No. 12/686,227, filed Jan. 12, 2010, which is a Divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/757,394, filed Jun. 4, 2007, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/810,865, filed Jun. 5, 2006, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONIn the past, photonic integrated circuits (PIC), which is also called planar lightwave circuits (PLC) or optical integrated circuits (OIC), are designed using single mode optical waveguide structures. The reasons of using single mode waveguide is to ensure that the whole circuits is within the single mode operation region, therefore, no high order modes will be excited both within the circuits and at the interface of the coupling to the outside world, usually to optical single mode fiber. If the waveguide is not single mode, when the higher order modes are excited, multiple guiding modes will propagate together along the waveguides and each mode carries part of signal power. As the result of the multimode propagation, the signal will suffer significant mode dispersion and random coupling among the modes when discontinuity or structure change occurs. The coupling from the PIC to the end single mode fiber will have large and random loss, making the device not usable in the system.
However, the single mode operation condition of the waveguide is, some time, too restrictive. It will also create problems for the coupling and the achievable circuit density of PICs. A typical example is the silicon-on-insulator (SOI) optical waveguide as shown in
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- <11>: Ridge waveguide cross section;
- <12>: The substrate of the ridge waveguide (bottom cladding);
- <13>: Ridge waveguide core;
- <14>: The ridge;
- <15>: Slab region of the ridge waveguide;
- <16>: Top cladding of the ridge waveguide;
- <17>: The layer structure of the starting SOI wafer;
- <18>: The silicon layer of the starting SOI wafer;
Due to the strong material index contrast between the core <13> and the cladding (substrate) in SOI (nf=3.48 vs. nc(f)=1.44˜1.8), for large dimension comparable with the regular single mode fiber, the single mode condition must be maintained by the weaker lateral effective index contrast, which is between the slab mode effective indices of the region I and II <15>. The slab region itself, both I and II, are multimode, but the lateral effective index contrast is so weak that all the high order vertical mode of slab region I can not propagate without radiation into the region II.
Since the vertical index contrast in SOI structure is much stronger than other material systems, such as silica (SiO2) and polymer, the SOI waveguide usually ends up have weaker lateral index contrast than silica and polymer based waveguide. It makes the SOI waveguide PIC with large cross section has to have larger bending radius, which results in low circuit density. To achieve a similar bending radius as silica waveguide, the waveguide dimension must be reduced to about half of the single mode fibers, which causes severe problem in coupling. A 3D on-chip taper usually must be used to reduce the coupling loss.
Another problem with SOI based PIC is the splitter junction loss. A typical excess loss of a SOI based waveguide splitter due to the splitter junction is usually ˜1 dB, while the silica based waveguide splitter has only less than 0.5 dB. The larger junction loss is because the high-index contrast between the silicon dioxide (cladding) and the silicon (waveguide core), and the ridge structure itself. When the mode hits the junction, a significant scattering will occur and the field gets an abrupt disturbance. An example is demonstrated in
There are two structures are invented here to solve the problem faced by the SOI PIC, and any other high index material system: the conflict between the density of the circuit and its performance. The first invented structure, or architecture, or design method, is the single mode photonic circuit (SMC) in which multimode waveguide can be used. Without the constraint of single mode waveguide condition, the multimode waveguides used in the SMC have both high lateral index contrast and therefore the PIC can have small bend radius, resulting in high density of the photonic circuit, and the high optical performance at the same time. Also, the thick silicon layer <18> can be used, to make the PIC easy to be coupled with standard single mode fiber.
The second invented structure is a parallel mode converter that can be used to construct a low loss optical splitter in any splitting ratio. With the parallel mode converter, the lightwave splitting is realized during the mode conversion between the input single channel waveguide mode and the super modes of the output multiple parallel-coupled channel waveguide. By eliminating the scattering caused by the oxide between the channels, the optical splitter can have the excess loss as low as those based on regular low index contrast material system.
Single Mode Photonic Circuits (SMC) Architecture
The first invented structure, or architecture, or a design approach, is the single mode photonic circuits (SMC) in which the multimode waveguide can be used. As we mentioned before, the whole PIC must be maintained as single mode operation, but it doesn't have to be achieved by the single mode waveguide. The idea is a new concept: single mode at system (circuit) level. As long as the whole circuit can only operate at one mode, the individual section can be constructed by multimode waveguides. A mode filter will be inserted after the multimode section. If designed correctly, the high order modes will not be excited in those multimode sections, and even they are, the mode filter will remove those high order components and keep the whole system at the single mode. In the ideal case, the high order mode excitation will never occur after the mode filter of the fiber-to-PIC coupling interface since only the main guiding mode is excited and shall be maintained as long as the continuity of the waveguide is ensured. In practice, the coupling to the high order mode from the excited main guiding mode may occur due to the imperfectness of the waveguide, such as the rough side wall. The excited high order modes will be removed by the mode filter following the multimode waveguide section; and the power loss due to this removal is equivalent to the power loss due to the scattering loss in regular single mode waveguide based PICs, since such scattering loss is nothing but the mode coupling from the guiding mode to the radiation mode in regular single mode waveguide.
The principle of the SMC is shown in
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- <31>: PIC based on single mode waveguide from end to end;
- <32>: PIC based SMC architecture in which multimode waveguides are used;
- <33>: The single mode fiber at the input side of the PIC;
- <34>: The single mode fiber at the output side of the PIN;
Expression (2a) and (2b) are the insertion loss caused by the coupling, in the case of <31> and <32> respectively. In (2a), ΦFis the fiber mode, ΨSMW is the fundamental guiding mode of the single mode waveguide, ΨRk is the radiation modes of the single mode waveguide, and ηRk is the transmission coefficient of each radiation mode. In principle, when the single mode waveguide length long enough, ηRk=0 for all k. One should notice that in (2a), the radiation modes are discrete, which is an approximate expression of the continuous radiation mode spectrum of the single mode waveguide. In (2b), ΨMMW
The way of forcing 72 MMWk=0 is to add a mode filter after the multimode sections (MWS). In general, a PIC using SMC structure can be described as a block diagram as in
To make the description clear, we give several SMC examples.
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- <51>: Waveguide lens-pinhole PIC, in which the waveguide pinhole is the mode filter. This PIC usually is a portion of the bigger PIC in which it works as a input section to couple with outside fiber;
- <52>: The waveguide lens formed by etching on the edge of the PIC;
- <53>: Waveguide pinhole;
The input beam, from single mode fiber for instance, is focused by the edge waveguide lens <52>, and then propagates through a slab waveguide region, which can be regarded as an infinite multimode channel waveguide. A pin-hole filter <53> after the slab waveguide region will remove any multimode components excited by displacement of input beam on incident angle and the position. Although in this example, the mode filter only works for the high order mode on lateral axis, not for the high order mode on vertical axis.
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- <61>: Weak Guiding Single Mode Waveguide mode filter;
- <62>: Ridge of the strong confined multimode ridge waveguide at input side;
- <63>: Deep etched are with silicon-dioxide (or other low index dielectric) filled;
- <64>: Shallow etched area with silicon-dioxide (or other low index dielectric) filled;
- <65>: Weak guiding single mode waveguide section;
- <66>: Taper section for mode conversion between weak guiding section and the multimode section;
- <67>: Ridge of the strong confined multimode ridge waveguide at output side;
Necessary taper structure <66> is used for the transition between multimode waveguide section (MWS) to the weak guiding single mode waveguide section. In the particular application like SOI waveguide based PIC, the multimode waveguide with large cross section and deeper etch has better mode matching with the regular single mode fiber. So this structure can be used to reduce the coupling loss while the SMC structure maintains the single mode operation of the whole circuits.
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- <71>: After etching, the remaining silicon surrounded by silicon-dioxide or other low index dielectric;
- <72>: The input facet of the PIC;
- <73>: The fundamental mode profile of the waveguide at the input facet;
- <74>: The low-level silicon slab, formed by deep etching;
- <75>: The high-level silicon slab, formed by shallow etching;
- <76>: The shoulder of the shallow etched ridge waveguide;
- <77>: The output facet;
- <78>: The fundamental mode profile of the waveguide at the output facet;
- <79>: The abnormal mode converter;
The interface end to the fiber is a deep etch ridge waveguide that has almost circular mode profile, a perfect match with the guiding mode of regular optical fiber. The deep etch ridge waveguide is multimode waveguide in nature, then into the chip, the waveguide transfer into a shallow etched waveguide with a shoulder structure on both side. Different from the mode size converter design in prior art, in our abnormal mode converter, the shallow ridge etch tapered in (narrower and narrower) or not tapering at all, and the shoulder tapered out (wider and wider). The deep etch can potentially go all the way to the bottom of the original silicon slab of the SOI wafer (stop at the buried oxide layer), in such case, the low-level slab <74> has 0 thickness.
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- <81>: the starting silicon slab of the SOI wafer;
- <82>: the ridge (waveguide) formed by shallow etch;
- <83>: the ridge (waveguide) formed by deep etch;
The structure in
Parallel Mode Converter for Low Loss Optical Splitter PIC
Another structure invented here is a parallel mode conversion structure used for waveguide optical splitter, or other similar devices. As we mentioned before, the SOI waveguide splitter suffers significant junction loss due to the scattering caused by the low index material between two adjacent waveguides (
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- <91>: the area circled by the shallow etch outline, in which the shallow etch will not be applied;
- <92>: the slab waveguide free space region, formed by applying shallow etch in the area circled by deep etch outline (where deep etch was not applied);
- <93>: the area where the deep etch was applied. This area will be covered by the silicon-dioxide or other low index dielectrics in the following process step;
- <94>: after the splitting, the optical mode profile of one of the optical channels;
- <95>: the single channel mode converter (mode converter 1), which pushes the light down to the high-level silicon slab and let the light completely confined by the high level slab <75>;
- <96>: the waveguide for input coupling, which is multimode and designed for coupling efficiency.
The waveguide splitter shown in
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- <101>: the oxide or other low index dielectric deposited on top of silicon after all the etching steps;
- <102>: the mode profile of the waveguide at the end of mode converter <95>;
In
An example of the cross-section of the parallel mode converter is shown in
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- <111>: top cladding of the waveguide, for example, the TEOS (oxide) in SOI-CMOS;
- <112>: mode profile of the supermode of the parallel coupled waveguide at this location;
- <113>: waveguide ridge of the channels, formed by the shallow etch;
It is at the starting point that is facing the sub-layer free space region <92>. Because the ridge created by the second etch is narrow, at the starting point facing the free space, the mode is mainly confined in the sub layer, which provides the best match with the field pattern coming from the sub-layer free space region. That is the fundamental reason why this parallel mode converter structure can almost eliminate the scattering loss that exists in the traditional splitter junctions.
In the parallel mode converter, after the starting point, the ridge width of top layer will become wider and wider. The light will then gradually move back into the top layer and be more and more confined laterally. At the end of the mode converter away from the sub-layer free space region <92>, the light will be split and separated into each individual waveguide, as shown in
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- <121>: the waveguide ridge of one of the separated channels.
The parallel mode converter can also be regarded as a parallel reverse taper. In traditional waveguide splitters, a parallel normal taper is used to bring the light from the free space region to individual waveguides. Parallel reverse taper achieve the same function as the parallel normal taper, but with the smallest possible scattering loss. In traditional splitters, along the aperture (the interface between free space and the starting point of the parallel taper), the width of the waveguide increases from the center channel to the edge channel. The gap between waveguides is the minimum. At the starting point, the mode is wide and superposition of the modes of all the waveguides has the optimized matching with the overall field pattern along the aperture of the free space region. Then the taper converts the wide mode at the starting point to the strong confined guiding mode of the single mode waveguide. The reverse taper not only has wide mode at the starting point, but also has the mode most confined in the sub layer, therefore, no scattering loss caused by the low index material in the gap region.
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- <141>: the starting points of the each individual channels at the parallel mode converter;
- <142>: the lateral free propagation region, the vertical confined provided by the sub-layer slab formed by the shallow etch;
The main difference between the structure in
Claims
1. Single mode photonic circuit architecture for planar lightwave circuits, the said single mode photonic circuit architecture uses multiple pairs of multimode waveguide section and mode filter; the said multimode waveguide is the ridge waveguide with the lateral index contrast greater than the single mode ridge waveguide at the same material system, so that small bend radius can be used; the said ridge waveguide with larger lateral index contrast is realized by deep etch into the silicon in a silicon-on-insulator system.
2. The single mode photonic circuit architecture for planar lightwave circuits recited in claim 1 wherein multiple pairs of multimode waveguide section and mode filter are connected in series or in parallel.
3. The single mode photonic circuit architecture recited in claim 2 wherein the mode filter structure is the combination of the waveguide lens and waveguide pin hole, the said waveguide pin hole removes the potential high order mode excitement at the waveguide lens section to ensure the single mode operation of the following planar lightwave circuits.
4. The single mode photonic circuit architecture recited in claim 1 wherein the mode filter structure is the combination of the waveguide lens and waveguide pin hole, the said waveguide pin hole removes the potential high order mode excitement at the waveguide lens section to ensure the single mode operation of the following planar lightwave circuits.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 12, 2011
Publication Date: Jan 12, 2012
Inventor: Bing Li (Bothell, WA)
Application Number: 13/180,948
International Classification: G02B 6/12 (20060101);