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Photonic
Systems Brown Bag Seminar Series
Thursday,
March 9, 2006, at 12 noon RLE
Haus Conf. Rm 36-428
Ultrawide
tuning of photonic microcavities via evanescent field perturbation
Peter
Rakich
The
field of integrated optics promises to provide a practical
and scaleable means of routing and switching light for numerous
applications ranging from telecommunications networks to sensing
and spectroscopy. However, there are currently few practical
means of creating large changes in waveguide effective index
in microphotonics, forming a key barrier to the development
of dynamic integrated optical circuits. A large change in
effective index is critical for the development of widely
tunable filters and for scaling active components to smaller
size. Currently, thermo-optical tuning is the only widely
implemented means of producing changes in effective index
in integrated circuits, but it has insufficient range, and
is slower than desired for many applications. For this
reason we explore geometrical tuning mechanisms, such as evanescent
tuning of microphotonic circuits.
In
the follwing study Evanescent field perturbation of an integrated
microring resonator is examined as a means of achieving high-fidelity
reversible tuning of photonic microcavities over large wavelength
ranges. A 1.7% wavelength tuning is achieved through the use
of a novel silica fiber probe that provides access to the
evanescent field of an air-clad high-index-contrast ring resonator.
As the microring is perturbed, the probe–ring distance is
found through simultaneous nanometric distance calibration
and force measurements. Experimental results agree well with
theoretical tuning. Some challenges of microelectromechanical
systems implementation of this effect is discussed, as well
as avenues for improvement of the tuning range.
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