Vanishing Core Fiber Spot Size Converter Interconnect (Polarizing or Polarization Maintaining)

Similar documents
Pitch Reducing Optical Fiber Array Two-Dimensional (2D)

Technical Brief #5. Power Monitors

EXPRIMENT 3 COUPLING FIBERS TO SEMICONDUCTOR SOURCES

Nufern 980 nm Select Cut-Off Single-Mode Fiber

Will contain image distance after raytrace Will contain image height after raytrace

Photonic Crystal Fiber Interfacing. In partnership with

EE119 Introduction to Optical Engineering Spring 2003 Final Exam. Name:

Industrial Automation

Miniature collimator for POF fiber: large aperture Model 011-TU2

Passive Fibre Components

WL Photonics Inc. Leading Provider of Fiber Optic Wavelength Tuning and Conditioning Solutions

CHAPTER 2 POLARIZATION SPLITTER- ROTATOR BASED ON A DOUBLE- ETCHED DIRECTIONAL COUPLER

Hybrid Integration Technology of Silicon Optical Waveguide and Electronic Circuit

COLLIMATORS AND FOCUSERS RECEPTACLE STYLE

Fabrication of Probes for High Resolution Optical Microscopy

WHITE PAPER LINK LOSS BUDGET ANALYSIS TAP APPLICATION NOTE LINK LOSS BUDGET ANALYSIS

2 in the multipath dispersion of the optical fibre. (b) Discuss the merits and drawbacks of cut bouls method of measurement of alternation.

Assembly and Experimental Characterization of Fiber Collimators for Low Loss Coupling

Fiber Optics. Laboratory exercise

BENCHTOP POLARIZATION EXTINCTION RATIO METER

Exp. No. 13 Measuring the runtime of light in the fiber

Examination Optoelectronic Communication Technology. April 11, Name: Student ID number: OCT1 1: OCT 2: OCT 3: OCT 4: Total: Grade:

Development of Vertical Spot Size Converter (SSC) with Low Coupling Loss Using 2.5%Δ Silica-Based Planar Lightwave Circuit

is a method of transmitting information from one place to another by sending light through an optical fiber. The light forms an electromagnetic

High-power All-Fiber components: The missing link for high power fiber lasers

Splice losses in holey optical fibers

White Paper: The Ins and Outs of Testing Bend Insensitive Multimode Fiber (BIMMF): The Need for Encircled Flux

A novel tunable diode laser using volume holographic gratings

1. Evolution Of Fiber Optic Systems

The absorption of the light may be intrinsic or extrinsic

CHIRPED FIBER BRAGG GRATING (CFBG) BY ETCHING TECHNIQUE FOR SIMULTANEOUS TEMPERATURE AND REFRACTIVE INDEX SENSING

FCQ1064-APC 1064 nm 1x4 Narrowband Coupler. Mounted on

Supplementary Information for. Surface Waves. Angelo Angelini, Elsie Barakat, Peter Munzert, Luca Boarino, Natascia De Leo,

UNIT Write notes on broadening of pulse in the fiber dispersion?

Title. Author(s)Saitoh, Fumiya; Saitoh, Kunimasa; Koshiba, Masanori. CitationOptics Express, 18(5): Issue Date Doc URL.

Fibre Optic Sensors: basic principles and most common applications

Physics 431 Final Exam Examples (3:00-5:00 pm 12/16/2009) TIME ALLOTTED: 120 MINUTES Name: Signature:

Physics 319 Laboratory: Optics

POLARIZATION EXTINCTION RATIO METER

Chapter 9 GUIDED WAVE OPTICS

Fiber Optic Communications Communication Systems

Multi-mode to single-mode conversion in a 61 port photonic lantern

COM 46: ADVANCED COMMUNICATIONS jfm 07 FIBER OPTICS

Lectureo5 FIBRE OPTICS. Unit-03

Laser Speckle Reducer LSR-3000 Series

APPLICATION NOTE POLARIZATION MEASUREMENTS

Fully-Etched Grating Coupler with Low Back Reflection

UNIT I INTRODUCTION TO OPTICAL FIBERS

Fiber Optics Dr. Vipul Rastogi Department of Physics Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee. Lecture - 04 Salient features of optical fiber II

YOUNGS MODULUS BY UNIFORM & NON UNIFORM BENDING OF A BEAM

Advanced Optical Communications Prof. R. K. Shevgaonkar Department of Electrical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay

HIGH POWER COLLIMATORS AND FOCUSERS PIGTAIL STYLE

Fundamentals of Electromagnetics With Engineering Applications by Stuart M. Wentworth Copyright 2005 by John Wiley & Sons. All rights reserved.

UNIT-II : SIGNAL DEGRADATION IN OPTICAL FIBERS

EE 233. LIGHTWAVE. Chapter 2. Optical Fibers. Instructor: Ivan P. Kaminow

Test procedures Page: 1 of 5

OPTICAL FIBER-BASED SENSING OF STRAIN AND TEMPERATURE

Integrated disruptive components for 2µm fibre Lasers ISLA. 2 µm Sub-Picosecond Fiber Lasers

TURNKEY, ULTRA STABLE, OEM LASER DIODE SOURCE OZ-1000 & OZ-2000 SERIES

4-Channel Optical Parallel Transceiver. Using 3-D Polymer Waveguide

HIGH-EFFICIENCY MQW ELECTROABSORPTION MODULATORS

New Waveguide Fabrication Techniques for Next-generation PLCs

A broadband achromatic metalens for focusing and imaging in the visible

Technical Brief #2. Depolarizers

Ring cavity tunable fiber laser with external transversely chirped Bragg grating

MAHALAKSHMI ENGINEERING COLLEGE TIRUCHIRAPALLI

R. J. Jones Optical Sciences OPTI 511L Fall 2017

1064nm High Power Fiber Collimator

DIRECTIONAL FIBER OPTIC POWER MONITORS (TAPS/PHOTODIODES)

EE119 Introduction to Optical Engineering Fall 2009 Final Exam. Name:

Radial Polarization Converter With LC Driver USER MANUAL

attocfm I for Surface Quality Inspection NANOSCOPY APPLICATION NOTE M01 RELATED PRODUCTS G

Electro-optic components and system

1782 DWDM High Power CW Source Laser

The Beam Characteristics of High Power Diode Laser Stack

1

Microphotonics Readiness for Commercial CMOS Manufacturing. Marco Romagnoli

User s Guide Modulator Alignment Procedure

Why Using Fiber for transmission

Silicon Photonics Technology Platform To Advance The Development Of Optical Interconnects

DIRECTIONAL FIBER OPTIC POWER MONITORS (TAPS/PHOTODIODES)

Design of LP01 to LPlm Mode Converters for Mode Division Multiplexing

Index. Cambridge University Press Silicon Photonics Design Lukas Chrostowski and Michael Hochberg. Index.

Narrow line diode laser stacks for DPAL pumping

How-to guide. Working with a pre-assembled THz system

Optical Isolator Tutorial (Page 1 of 2) νlh, where ν, L, and H are as defined below. ν: the Verdet Constant, a property of the

Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical Beamscanning by Wavelength Switching T. K. Chan, E. Myslivets, J. E. Ford

Components and Tools for Polarization-maintaining

Optics Communications

High brightness semiconductor lasers M.L. Osowski, W. Hu, R.M. Lammert, T. Liu, Y. Ma, S.W. Oh, C. Panja, P.T. Rudy, T. Stakelon and J.E.

1782 DWDM High Power CW Source Laser

A Low-loss Integrated Beam Combiner based on Polarization Multiplexing

Novel Optical Waveguide Design Based on Wavefront Matching Method

Deformable MEMS Micromirror Array for Wavelength and Angle Insensitive Retro-Reflecting Modulators Trevor K. Chan & Joseph E. Ford

User s Guide Modulator Alignment Procedure

All-Fiber Wavelength-Tunable Acoustooptic Switches Based on Intermodal Coupling in Fibers

Chapter 18: Fiber Optic and Laser Technology

Fiber Optic Communications

VISUAL PHYSICS ONLINE DEPTH STUDY: ELECTRON MICROSCOPES

Fiber Optic Basics. Tutorial. Fiber Basics. The Fiber as a Dielectric Wave-Guide: Fiber Modes. Bandwidth Limitations. Contact Us Normal View Feedback

Transcription:

Vanishing Core Fiber Spot Size Converter Interconnect (Polarizing or Polarization Maintaining) The Go!Foton Interconnect (Go!Foton FSSC) is an in-fiber, spot size converting interconnect for convenient and efficient coupling of light from an optical fiber into a planar waveguide device, photodiode or other high numerical aperture (NA) waveguide. A vanishingcore fiber design allows light from a conventional low NA fiber to be coupled to another waveguide with much smaller mode field dimensions at high coupling efficiency. The Go!Foton FSSC can be used with an air gap but it also allows index-matching compounds to be used between the coupler and waveguide as opposed to microlens-based coupling in which an air gap is unavoidable. The Go!Foton FSSC is available in three basic polarization maintaining or polarizing variations: FSSC-PL: Linearly polarizing tapered coupler FSSC-PC: Circularly polarizing tapered coupler FSSC-PM: Polarization maintaining tapered coupler The Go!Foton FSSC products are endface coupled and are provided within an all-glass construct (Package A) or within a metal tube (Packages B and C). Either design is pigtailed with a PM fiber pigtail. Standard central wavelengths provided are 1550, 1310, 1060 and 980 nm. The technology is readily scalable, and other central wavelengths as well as custom mode field diameters can be provided. A coupler chuck with standard 6.35 mm (0.25 ) outer diameter, for compatibility with standard mounts, is also available, in conjunction with the standard metal tube package (Package B). Applications: Planar waveguide device coupling Photodiode coupling Laser diode coupling Nanostructure coupling : PROPERTIES Central Wavelength 1 980/1060 nm 1310 nm 1550 nm Mode Field size 2 0.5 x 0.8 µm 0.7 x 1.0 µm 0.8 x 1.2 µm Bandwidth >50 nm Polarization Extinction Ratio 3 >25 db Typical Insertion Loss <1 db Package Style All-glass Pigtails 4 PM, 1 m, inside 900 µm furcation tube Operating Temperature -40 to +85 C Storage Temperature -70 to +85 C 1 Other wavelengths available upon request 2 Mode field dimensions can be tailored upon request 3 Typical passing polarization aligned to fiber s slow axis 4 Connectorization available upon request All information contained herein is believed to be accurate and is subject to change without notice. No responsibility is assumed for its use. Chiral Photonics, Inc., its subsidiaries and affiliates, or manufacturer, reserve the right to make changes, without notice, to product design, product components, and product manufacturing methods. Some specific combinations of options may not be available. Please contact Chiral Photonics, Inc. for more information. Go!Foton All rights reserved. 03/09 FSSC Brochure (1 / 6) www.gofoton.com

Package Styles: A. All-Glass (Fiber Spot Size Converter) B. Multi Channel Array (custom) channel to channel pitch can be < 20 um 2 / 6 www.gofoton.com

Technical Description / Discussion: The essence of the approach to matching both the mode profiles and numerical apertures (NAs) of two distinct waveguides is illustrated schematically in Fig. 1. This figure illustrates the couplers use as an interconnect between a standard singlemode fiber and a waveguide. A custom fiber with a central core with index of refraction, n 1, centered in a rectangular section with slightly smaller index, n 2, is surrounded by the cladding with significantly lower index, n 3. The wide end of the fiber coupler is typically spliced to standard single mode or polarization maintaining fiber. The outer core serves as the main effective constituent of the cladding at the wide end of the coupler and this segment of the fiber may support the propagation of only a single core mode. The indices of refraction are chosen so that the NA of the wide end of the coupler, NA low 2 2 n 1 n2, matches the NA of the fiber to which it is connected, while the diameters of the inner and outer cores are chosen so that the mode field diameters of the connected fibers are the same. Cladding (Diameter 125 µm) Fiber Vanishing Coupling Core Low NA (MFD 10 µm) n 3 n 2 n 1 Planar Waveguide High NA (MFD 1 µm) Secondary High NA Core Fig.1. Tapered optical fiber coupler connecting a standard fiber (left) to a planar waveguide (right). The mode field diameter (MFD) is transformed from 10 to 1 m. The fiber is tapered so that the inner core is too small to support propagation. The fiber then acts as if it has a single core of index close to n 2 surrounded by cladding with index n 3. The indices of refraction are chosen so that the NA of the narrow end of the fiber coupler, NA high 2 2 n 2 n3, matches the NA of the waveguide to which it is connected. The width of the tapered end of the fiber is chosen to create a mode field diameter matching that for the waveguide mode. Matching the NA via the indices of the inner and outer cores and cladding makes it possible to couple to waveguides without the use of a lens. Lenses are most compact and efficient when they are attached to the end of the fiber. However, lens-coupling to the waveguide necessitates an air gap with a significant index mismatch between the waveguide and air. Because the FSSC does not require use of a lens, an index matching compound with index between that of the high index core and the still higher index of the waveguide can be used to substantially mitigate reflection losses. Another drawback of commercial couplers utilizing lenses is that mode field diameters of less than 2 m are not available. In contrast, we are able to provide mode field diameters of under 1 m. 3 / 6 www.gofoton.com

Unpolarized low NA input It is often desirable to couple highly polarized radiation into or out of the waveguide. This can be accomplished by maintaining polarization through or incorporating a linear polarizer into the FSSC. A schematic of the polarizing coupler is shown in Fig. 2, which shows a sketch of a tapered fiber followed by a microscopic image of a chiral fiber linear polarizer. The chiral polarizer consists of a double-helix Go!Foton grating with pitch which is smoothly accelerated to a constant value for some length and then decelerated to the initial untwisted state. The double helix grating is formed by twisting a birefringent fiber with 180 0 rotation symmetry. The cross section of the core of a fiber with core suitable for a chiral fiber tapered polarizer is shown in Fig. 3. The untwisted fiber preform consists of a high-index outer rectangular core with an aspect ratio of 2:1 surrounded by a cladding n=1.5 n=1.76 n=1.7 Linearly polarized high NA output Fig. 2. Schematic of a polarizing coupler incorporating a microscope image of a chiral fiber polarizer. with circular outer perimeter. The birefringence is proportional to the index difference between the core and cladding. Tapered couplers with polarization extinction ratio exceeding 30 db are available. Fig. 3. Simulated tapered coupler showing constituent indices of refraction (left) and calculated mode field (right). n=3.152 n=3.5 n=1 Fig. 4. Simulated waveguide showing indices of refraction (left) and calculated mode field (right). Using an exemplary InP waveguide that approximates the near field image you sent us, as shown in Figure 4, we calculated coupling losses between our standard tapered coupler product and the waveguide. The coupling loss was calculated for abutted waveguides when both are oriented similarly and when they are oriented at 90 degrees to each other. An index matching fluid of index 2 was assumed. Fig. 5 shows the calculated losses 4 / 6 www.gofoton.com

Transmission (db) Transmission (db) as a function of the gap distance between the two waveguides for both linear polarizations. 0-1 -2-3 -4-5 -6-7 -8 0 2 4 6 8 10 Gap width (um) 0-1 -2-3 -4-5 -6-7 -8 0 2 4 6 8 10 Gap width (um) Fig. 5. Transmission losses for parallel (top) and perpendicularly (bottom) abutted TC and waveguide of Figs 3 and 4. The losses are given for both polarizations as a function of gap width in microns, assuming an index matching compound of refractive index of 2 fills the gap. A comparison of the measured and calculated far-field energy distributions of the tapered coupler is shown in Figure 6. 5 / 6 www.gofoton.com

Light intensity (db) 14 12 10 8 6 4 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 2.2 2.4 2.6-0.8-0.4 0 0.4 0.8 Normalized transverse coordinate Fig. 6. Far-field intensity distribution. The black solid and dashed lines represent the calculated distributions in the transverse X and Y directions, respectively. The red and blue points are the measured distributions along the X and Y directions, respectively. The normalized transverse coordinate is the transverse coordinate divided by the distance from the coupler tip (105 mm). Lastly, we have measured coupler-to-coupler losses directly using two 3-coordinate stages, which have 0.5 micron accuracy and have measured overall losses to be 5 db or 2.5 db per tapered coupler. 6 / 6 www.gofoton.com