MODE CONVERTER AND METHOD OF FABRICATING THEREOF
An optical mode converter and method of fabricating the same from wafer including a double silicon-on-insulator layer structure. The method comprising: providing a first mask over a portion of a device layer of the DSOI layer structure; etching an unmasked portion of the device layer down to at least an upper buried oxide layer, to provide a cavity; etching a first isolation trench and a second isolation trench into a mode converter layer, the mode converter layer being: on an opposite side of the upper buried oxide layer to the device layer and between the upper buried oxide layer and a lower buried oxide layer, the lower buried oxide layer being above a substrate; wherein the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench define a tapered waveguide; filling the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench with an insulating material, so as to optically isolate the tapered waveguide from the remaining mode converter layer; and regrowing the etched region of the device layer.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/317,151, filed Jan. 11, 2019, which is a U.S. National Phase Patent Application and claims priority to and the benefit of International Application Number PCT/GB2017/052065, filed on Jul. 13, 2017, which claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/362,012, filed on Jul. 13, 2016, the entire contents of all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to a mode converter and method of fabricating thereof, and particularly mode converters fabricated using, for example, substrates with double silicon on insulator layers.
BACKGROUNDThe size of an optical mode within a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) is generally much smaller than the optical mode of a connected fibre optic cable. For example, the optical mode within a fibre optic cable may be around 13 μm×13 μm. Whereas the optical mode within the PIC may be typically a few microns or less. This mismatch in optical mode can lead to coupling losses when connecting the PIC to the fibre optic cable.
Generally increasing the mode size of the optical mode within the PIC is not a viable solution, as the resulting optical circuit would be unfeasibly large.
Known in the prior art are mode converters, which convert the optical mode of the fibre optic cable to that of the optical mode within the PIC (and vice versa). Generally, mode converters in the prior art fall within two categories:
-
- (1) Converters which involve modified fibre profiles (for example, lensed or tapered fibres) and active alignment to the PIC via fibres mounted in a fibre block.
- (2) Providing a tapered waveguide within the PIC, with integrated v-grooves for passive alignment or fibre attach via a separate fibre block.
Mode converters falling within category (1) generally demand very tight fibre alignment tolerances, and packaging costs can be high due to the increased number of parts and the labour of precise active alignment of the fibre block to the PIC.
Whereas mode converters falling within category (2) generally result in a large variation in the topography of a PIC, due to the relatively large height of the mode converter in contrast to the remaining components on the PIC. This variation in topography can be challenging when it comes to photolithographic processes used in fabrication as it can degrade the dimensional control of the other components on the PIC. The invention aims to provide a manufacturable method of fabricating a low loss, passively aligned PIC without the topography limitations of the prior art.
SUMMARYAt its broadest, the invention provides a method of manufacturing a monolithic optical mode converter using a double silicon-on-insulator structure, where the mode converter is buried relative to an upper surface of the wafer.
In a first aspect, the present invention provides a method of fabricating an optical mode converter from a wafer including a double silicon-on-insulator (DSOI) layer structure, comprising the steps of: providing a first mask over a portion of a device layer of the DSOI layer structure; etching an unmasked portion of the device layer down to at least an upper buried oxide layer, to provide a cavity; etching a first isolation trench and a second isolation trench into a mode converter layer, the mode converter layer being: on an opposite side of the upper buried oxide layer to the device layer and between the upper buried oxide layer and a lower buried oxide layer, the lower buried oxide layer being above a substrate; wherein the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench define a tapered waveguide; filling the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench with an insulating material, so as to optically isolate the tapered waveguide from the remaining mode converter layer; and regrowing the etched region of the device layer.
Advantageously, such a method improves the dimensional tolerances of the device and integrated components. Moreover, the uniformity in the thickness of the device layer (which is high as a result of using a pre-fabricated DSOI wafer) is not compromised by fabrication of the mode converter.
In a second aspect, the present invention provides an optical mode converter, formed on a wafer including a double silicon-on-insulator (DSOI) layer structure, comprising: a substrate, above which is a lower buried oxide layer; a mode converter layer, which is above the lower buried oxide layer, and includes: a tapered waveguide, cladded by an insulator disposed in a first isolation trench and a second isolation trench; and a bulk region, adjacent to the insulator and on an opposing side thereof to the tapered waveguide, formed of a same material as the tapered waveguide; an upper buried oxide layer, which is above the mode converter layer and has a gap therein above the tapered waveguide; and a device layer, which is above the upper buried oxide layer; wherein the device layer includes two etched portions which define a rib waveguide, and an uppermost surface of the rib waveguide is co-planar with an uppermost surface of the device layer.
Optional features of the invention will now be set out. These are applicable singly or in any combination with any aspect of the invention.
The wafer may be a double silicon-in-insulator wafer. The method may include a step of etching a rib waveguide from the regrown region of the device layer.
The step of etching the unmasked portion of the device layer down to at least the upper buried oxide layer may include: a first etching step, etching from an upper surface of the device layer to an upper surface of the upper buried oxide layer; and a second etching step, etching from an upper surface of the upper buried oxide layer to an upper surface of the mode converter layer. The second etching step may include not removing all of the buried oxide in the cavity. For example, a portion of the buried oxide may be retained on opposing sides of the cavity.
The method may further comprise a step, between the steps of etching the unmasked portion and etching the first and second isolation trenches, of: depositing an oxidation barrier over: (i) the first mask and (ii) the cavity, wherein the cavity is defined by sidewalls and a bed. The step of filling the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench may include thermally oxidising the mode converter layer, so as to fill the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench with an oxide.
The method may include a step, after regrowing the etch region of the device layer, of: planarizing the regrown region of the device layer such that it is coplanar with an uppermost surface of the unetched region of the device layer.
The first tapered waveguide may be provided with a first width of between 9 μm and 15 μm and a second width of less than 1 μm.
A width of the cavity etched may be substantially wider than a widest width of the tapered waveguide.
The method may further comprise a step of: etching a v-groove interface at a first end of the mode converter, such that an input facet of the tapered waveguide overhangs the v-groove interface, so as to allow passive alignment of a fibre optical cable to the tapered waveguide. The method may further comprise a step of polishing a first end of the mode converter, so as to provide a planar input facet for active alignment to a fibre optic cable.
The insulator disposed within the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench may be silicon dioxide. The first isolation trench and the second isolation trench may respectively have a width of between 0.4 μm and 1.0 μm.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
As is shown more clearly in
The rib waveguide 16 and tapered waveguide 102, at the location indicated by the cross-section A-A′, have a width 305 which partially defines the optical mode. As both waveguides taper in width, at the location indicated by cross-section B-B′, as shown in
In contrast,
Therefore, as shown in
In a first step, a wafer 1 is provided which includes a double silicon-on-insulator (DSOI) layer structure, as shown in
In a next step, shown in
In
A further processing step is shown in
In
In a subsequent step, as shown in
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art of silicon photonic circuits that a wide variety of photonic elements can now be fabricated in the device layer connected via the rib waveguide 16 to the tapered waveguide 102 for low loss coupling from a photonic integrated circuit to a fibre optic cable (and vice versa).
An alternative example is shown in
While the invention has been described in conjunction with the exemplary embodiments described above, many equivalent modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art when given this disclosure. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments of the invention set forth above are considered to be illustrative and not limiting. Various changes to the described embodiments may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
All references referred to above are hereby incorporated by reference.
LIST OF FEATURES
- 1 Wafer
- 2 Buried oxide layer
- 3 Buried oxide layer
- 4 Device layer
- 5 Mode converter layer
- 6 Substrate
- 7 Oxide layer
- 8 Cavity in device layer
- 9 New oxide layer
- 10 Oxide isolation region
- 11 Oxidation barrier
- 12a, 12b Isolation trenches
- 13a, 13b Tapered waveguide cladding
- 14 Overgrown region
- 15 Regrown region
- 16 Rib waveguide
- 17a, 17b First and second channels
- 18 Fibre optic cable cladding
- 19 Fibre optic cable core
- 20 Fibre optic cable
- 21 V-groove
- 22 Input facet
- 100 Mode converter
- 101 Overhanging portion
- 102 Tapered waveguide
- 305 First tapered waveguide width
- 306 Second tapered waveguide width
- 602 Dry etched facet
- 701 Height of rib waveguide
- 702 Height of device layer
Claims
1. A method of fabricating an optical mode converter from a wafer including a double silicon-on-insulator (DSOI) layer structure, comprising the steps of:
- providing a first mask over a portion of a device layer of the DSOI layer structure;
- etching an unmasked portion of the device layer down to at least an upper buried oxide layer, to provide a cavity;
- etching a first isolation trench and a second isolation trench into a mode converter layer, the mode converter layer being: on an opposite side of the upper buried oxide layer from the device layer and between the upper buried oxide layer and a lower buried oxide layer, the lower buried oxide layer being above a substrate;
- wherein the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench define a tapered waveguide;
- filling the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench with an insulating material, so as to optically isolate the tapered waveguide from the remaining mode converter layer; and
- regrowing the etched region of the device layer.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step of:
- etching a rib waveguide from the regrown region of the device layer.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of etching the unmasked portion of the device layer down to at least the upper buried oxide layer comprises:
- a first etching step, etching from an upper surface of the device layer to an upper surface of the upper buried oxide layer; and
- a second etching step, etching from an upper surface of the upper buried oxide layer to an upper surface of the mode converter layer.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the second etching step does not remove all of the buried oxide layer in the cavity.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step, between the steps of etching the unmasked portion and etching the first and second isolation trenches, of:
- depositing an oxidation barrier over: (i) the first mask and (ii) the cavity, wherein the cavity is defined by sidewalls and a bed.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of filling the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench comprises:
- thermally oxidizing the mode converter layer, so as to fill the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench with an oxide.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step, after regrowing the etched region of the device layer, of:
- planarizing the regrown region of the device layer such that it is coplanar with an uppermost surface of the unetched region of the device layer.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the tapered waveguide is provided with a first width of between 9 μm and 15 μm and a second width of less than 1 μm.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein a width of the cavity etched is substantially wider than a widest width of the tapered waveguide.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step of:
- etching a v-groove interface at a first end of the mode converter, such that an input facet of the tapered waveguide overhangs the v-groove interface, so as to allow passive alignment of a fiber optical cable to the tapered waveguide.
11. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step of:
- polishing a first end of the tapered waveguide, so as to provide a planar input facet for active alignment to a fiber optic cable.
12. An optical mode converter, formed on a wafer including a double silicon-on-insulator (DSOI) layer structure, comprising:
- a substrate, above which is a lower buried oxide layer;
- a mode converter layer, which is above the lower buried oxide layer, and includes: a tapered waveguide, cladded by an insulator disposed in a first isolation trench and a second isolation trench; and a bulk region, adjacent to the insulator and on an opposing side thereof to the tapered waveguide, formed of a same material as the tapered waveguide;
- an upper buried oxide layer, which is above the mode converter layer and has a gap therein above the tapered waveguide; and
- a device layer, which is above the upper buried oxide layer;
- wherein the device layer includes two etched portions which define a rib waveguide, and an uppermost surface of the rib waveguide is co-planar with an uppermost surface of the device layer.
13. The optical mode converter of claim 12, wherein the tapered waveguide has a first width of between 9 μm and 15 μm and a second width of less than 1 μm.
14. The optical mode converter of claim 12, further comprising a v-groove interface at a first end of the mode converter, wherein an input facet of the tapered waveguide overhangs the v-groove interface so as to allow passive alignment of a fiber optical cable to the tapered waveguide.
15. The optical mode converter of claim 12, further comprising a polished first end of the tapered waveguide, providing a planar input facet for active alignment to a fiber optic cable.
16. The optical mode converter of claim 12, wherein the insulator is silicon dioxide.
17. The optical mode converter of claim 12, wherein the first isolation trench and the second isolation trench respectively have a width of between 0.4 μm and 1.0 μm.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 13, 2020
Publication Date: Jul 30, 2020
Inventors: John Drake (St. Ives), Damiana Lerose (Pasadena, CA), Henri Nykänen (Helsinki)
Application Number: 16/847,567