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Guiding and Confining Light in Void Nanostructure Vilson R. Almeida, Qianfan Xu, Carlos A. Barrios, and Michal Lipson School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Cornell University, 411 Phillips Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853 Email: [email protected] Abstract: We present a novel waveguide geometry for enhancing and confining light in a nanometer-wide low-index material. Light enhancement and confinement is caused by large discontinuity of the electric field at high-index-contrast interfaces. We show that by using such a structure the field can be confined in a 50-nm-wide low index region with a normalized intensity of 20 µm-2. This intensity is approximately 20 times higher than that can be achieved in SiO2 with conventional rectangular waveguides. Recent results in integrated optics have shown the ability to guide, bend, split and filter [1-5] light on chips using optical devices based on high-index-contrast waveguides. In all of these devices, the guiding mechanism is based on total internal reflection (TIR) in a high-index-material (core) surrounded by a low-index material (cladding). TIR mechanism can confine light very strongly in the high-index material. In recent years, a number of structures have been proposed to guide or enhance light in low-index materials [6-11]. All of them rely on the external reflections provided by interference effects. Unlike TIR, the external reflection cannot be perfectly unity; therefore, the modes in these structures are inherently leaky modes. In addition, since interferences are involved, these structures are strongly wavelength dependent. 1 Here we show that the field can be enhanced and confined in the low-index material even when light is guided by TIR. Considering a high-index-contrast interface, Maxwell’s equations state that in order to satisfy the continuity of the normal component of electric flux density D, the correspondent electric field (E-field) has to undergo a large discontinuity with much higher amplitude in the low-index side. We show that this discontinuity can be used to strongly enhance and confine light in a nanometer-wide region of low-index material. Since the guiding mode is indeed an eigenmode, the proposed structure is fundamentally lossless and has very low wavelength sensitivity. Furthermore, we show that this structure is compatible with highly integrated photonics technology. The principle of operation of the novel structure can be illustrated by analyzing the slab-based structure shown in Fig. 1(a), where a low-index slot is embedded between two high-index slabs (the shadowed regions). The novel structure is hereafter referred as slot-waveguide. The slot-waveguide eigenmode can be seen as formed by the interaction between the fundamental eigenmodes of the individual slab-waveguides. Rigorously, the analytical solution for the transverse E-field profile Ex of the fundamental transverse-magnetic (TM) eigenmode of the slab-based slot-waveguide is 1 cosh(γ S x), x < a nS 2 1 γ E x ( x) = A ⋅ 2 cosh(γ S a ) cos[κ H ( x − a )] + 2 S sinh(γ S a ) sin [κ H ( x − a )], a < x < b nS κ H nH 2 1 n γ 2 cosh(γ S a ) cos[κ H (b − a )] + H2 S sinh(γ S a ) sin [κ H (b − a )] ⋅ exp[− γ C ⋅ ( x − b)], nS κ H nC , (1) x >b where κH is the transverse wavenumber in the high-index slabs, γC is the field decay coefficient in the cladding, γS is the field decay coefficient in the slot, and the constant A is given by 2 A = A0 µ0 ε0 k 0 nH − κ H k0 2 2 2 where A0 is an arbitrary constant, k0 = 2π/λ0 is the vacuum wavenumber, and ε0 and µ0 are the electric permittivity and magnetic permeability in vacuum, respectively. The transverse parameters κH, γS, and γC simultaneously obey the following relations β 2 = k 0 2 nH 2 − κ H 2 = k 0 2 nC 2 + γ C 2 = k 0 2 nS 2 + γ S 2 , (2) where β is the eigenmode propagation constant, which can be calculated by solving the transcendental characteristic equation γ C nH 2 γ S nH 2 = tan κ H (b − a ) − arctan tanh(γ S a ) . 2 2 κ n H C κ H nS (3) One can see from equation (1) that at the interface between the slot and the slabs ( x = a ) the E-field 2 immediately inside the slot ( x = a − ) is n H / n S 2 high-index slabs ( x = a + ). The ratio n H / n S 2 2 times higher than that immediately inside the equals 6 for a Si/SiO2 interface, and equals 12 for a Si/air interface. When the width of the slot is much smaller than the characteristic decay length inside the slot ( a << 1 / γ S ), the field remains high all across the slot. By assuming that nH = 3.48, nS = nC = 1.44, a = 25 nm, and b = 205nm, we calculated the TM Ex distribution at λ0 = 1.55 µm. Fig. 2 shows the Ex distribution, which evidences the large discontinuity and the high E-field confinement in the slot; in this case, a = 25 nm << 1 / γ S = 140 nm . We also show in Fig. 2 (dotted and dashed lines), the fundamental eigenmodes of the individual slab-waveguides. Hereafter we shall consider a 3D slot-waveguide structure with finite height [see Fig. 1(b)]. In this case, the quasi-Transverse-Electric (quasi-TE) eigenmode is defined as the one that presents the major E-field component along the x-direction. Therefore, the quasi-TE eigenmode in the 3D slot-waveguide structure 3 presents optical properties similar to those of the TM eigenmode in the studied slab-based slot-waveguide structure. We numerically simulated the quasi-TE eigenmode of the slot-waveguide structure shown in Fig. 1(b) using a full-vectorial finite difference mode solver [12]. Non-uniform grid mesh is used in the simulations, which simultaneously enables fine grids near the slot for maximizing the accuracy, and large domains of simulation for eliminating the influence of boundary conditions. In the simulations, the smallest grid size is one-twentieth of the slot width, and the total domain is 10 µm × 10 µm. For concreteness, we assume that the slot-waveguide is built on the widely used Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) platform, with the silicon being the high-index material, and SiO2 composing the low-index surrounding cladding. Therefore nH = 3.48, nC = 1.44, and λ0 = 1.55 µm are assumed, unless otherwise specified. We also assume that the rectangular cross-section slot region, with height h and width wS, is filled with SiO2 (nS = 1.44). In practice, the slot can be filled with any low-index material of interest, and the platform and the working wavelength can be chosen according to the application; in any of these variants, the principle of the E-field enhancement in the slot remains the same. The transverse E-field distribution of the quasi-TE mode is shown in Fig. 3. In all simulations we have assumed a slot-waveguide with default cross-section parameters wH = 180 nm, wS = 50 nm, and h = 300 nm, unless otherwise specified. Figure 3(a) shows the contours of the E-field amplitude and the E-field lines. The center bright region shows a strong E-field inside the slot. The directions of the E-field lines in the slot confirm that the major component of the E-field is normal to the high-index-contrast interface, which induces the strong discontinuity of the E-field. The amplitude profile of the E-field is shown in the 3D surface plot shown in Fig. 3(b). One can see that the amplitude profile of the E-field along the x-direction at y = 0 strongly resembles the one in Fig. 2 for the analytical expression of the TM eigenmode of the 4 slab-based structure. The vertical confinement of the E-field in the slot region is dictated by that in the high-index regions. Note that since the slot-waveguide structure has a well-defined eigenmode, it is theoretically lossless. As a result of the E-field enhancement in the slot, the optical intensity (i.e., optical power density) in the slot is much higher than that in the high-index region of the structure. Figure 4 shows the optical power Pslot and the average optical intensity Islot = Pslot/(h⋅wS) inside the slot as a function of its width wS and the width of the silicon region wH. Both Pslot and Islot are normalized with respect to the total optical power in the waveguide. For comparison, the normalized average intensity in the silicon region ISi is plotted as well. One can see from Fig. 4 that Islot decreases monotonically with the increase of the slot width wS, but it remains very high when the slot is narrow (wS < 40 nm); under this condition, Islot stays about 10 times higher than ISi. Figure 4 shows that Pslot remains nearly constant around 30% for wS ≥ 50 nm. For wS = 50 nm, Islot is as high as 20 µm-2, which is 6 times higher than ISi. One can also see from Fig. 4 that wH does not significantly affect the slot-waveguide performance. Light propagating in the slot-waveguide, not only is significantly confined to a low-index material, but also has an intensity much higher than that achievable using conventional rectangular waveguides. With the same finite difference mode solver, we simulated the eigenmodes of the conventional channel (rectangular cross-section with step-index profile) waveguides [1], and calculated the average intensities in the cores of the waveguides. When the cross-section of the waveguide is large, the intensity is low because of the large mode size. When the cross-section is too small, the intensity is also low because the mode becomes delocalized [13]. Therefore, there is an optimal waveguide dimension for achieving the highest intensity. The highest normalized average intensity in a conventional channel SOI waveguide is less than 9 5 µm-2, which is obtained for a cross-section of 360 nm × 200 nm. If the light is to be confined in a low-index material such as SiO2 with a conventional channel waveguide structure, the highest possible index contrast that can be achieved is through the SiO2/air platform. The highest normalized average intensity that can be obtained in such a structure is less than 1.1 µm-2, which is obtained for a cross-section of 900 nm × 500 nm; this is about 20 times lower than that we have calculated for the slot-waveguide with default cross-section parameters. For the leaky-mode waveguides based on external reflections, such as antiresonant reflecting optical waveguide (ARROW) and photonic crystal waveguide, the size of the low-index core is limited to be larger than half of the wavelength in the low-index material. Therefore, the normalized intensity can hardly exceed 1 µm-2 at λ0 = 1.55 µm wavelength. In order to investigate the wavelength dependence, we simulated both the Pslot and Islot as a function of wavelength over a broad spectral range, which is shown in Fig. 5. The simulations show that the structure has very low wavelength sensitivity. This is because there is no interference effect involved in the guiding and confinement mechanism. The material dispersion [14] has been taken into account in the simulations. One can see that Pslot and Islot show very low wavelength sensitivity, varying only less than 10% over a wavelength span of more than 400 nm. Therefore, the same slot-waveguide can be used to guide and confine light in a low-index material over a broad wavelength range, what widens its application scope. As a comparison, Fig. 5 shows the optical intensity levels for the alternative approaches discussed in the previous paragraph. With the purpose of verifying the slot-waveguide compatibility with highly integrated photonics technology, we calculated the bending losses for a slot-waveguide with default cross-section parameters and bending radius of only R = 5 µm. We found out that the transmission in a 360º turn is of 99.2 %, which 6 corresponds to propagation bending losses of only 11 dB/cm. This parameter is particularly relevant for the fabrication of high-quality ring-resonators, where such bending losses can potentially translate into a quality-factor of about Q = 20,000. In summary, we present in this paper a novel waveguide geometry for guiding and confining light in low index region. The waveguide discussed has two unique properties. First, it produces high E-field amplitude, optical power and optical intensity, in low-index materials on levels that cannot be achievable with conventional waveguides. This property enables highly efficient interaction between fields and active materials, which may lead to all-optical switching and parametric amplification on integrated photonics. Second, a strong E-field confinement is localized in a nanometer-sized low-index region, which could be filled with low-index materials such as liquids or gases. Therefore, the slot-waveguide can be used to greatly increase the sensibility of compact optical sensing devices or to enhance the efficiency of near-field optical probes. Acknowledgement The authors would like to thank Christina Manolatou for her guidance and assistance in the simulations and Roberto R. Panepucci for fruitful discussions. This work was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under grant number AFOSR F49620-03-1-0424. V. R. Almeida acknowledges sponsorship support provided by the Brazilian Defense Ministry. 7 References 1. K. K. Lee, D. R. Lim, L. C. Kimerling, J. Shin, and F. Cerrina, “Fabrication of ultralow-loss Si/SiO2 waveguides by roughness reduction,” Opt. Lett. 26, 1888 (2001). 2. A. Sakai, G. Hara, and T. Baba, “Sharply bent optical waveguide on silicon-on-insulator substrate,” Proceedings of SPIE 4283, 610 (2001). 3. C. Manolatou, S. G. Johnson, S. Fan, P. R. Villeneuve, H. A. Haus, and J. D. Joannopoulos, “High-density integrated optics,” J. Lightwave Technol. 17, 1682 (1999). 4. R. L. Espinola, R. U. Ahmad, F. Pizzuto, M. J. Steel, and R. M. Osgood, “A study of high-index-contrast 90° waveguide bend structures,” Optics Express 8, 517 (2001). 5. B. E. Little, J. S. Foresi, G. Steinmeyer, E. R. Thoen, S. T. Chu, H. A. Haus, E. P. Ippen, L. C. Kimerling, and W. Greene, “Ultra-compact Si-SiO2 microring resonator optical channel dropping filters,” IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 10, 549 (1998). 6. M. A. Duguay, Y. Kokubun, and T. L. Koch, “Antiresonant reflecting optical waveguides in SiO2-Si multilayer structures,” Appl. Phy. Lett. 49, 13 (1986). 7. R. Bernini, S. Campopiano, L. Zeni, and C.de Boer, and P. M. Sarro, “Planar antiresonant reflecting optical waveguides as sensors for liquid substances,” Sensors, Proceedings of IEEE 2, 1160 (2002). 8. H. Schmidt, Y. Dongliang, and A. Hawkins, “Integrated optical spectroscopy of lowindex gases and liquids using ARROW waveguides,” in Integrated Photonics Research, OSA Technical Digest, (Optical Society of America, Washington DC, 2003), ItuC2-1. 9. R. F. Cregan, B. J. Mangan, J. C. Knight, T. A. Birks, P. St. J. Russel, P. J. Roberts, and D. C. Allan, “Single-mode photonic band gap guidance of light in air,” Science 285, 1537(1999). 8 10. H. A. Jamid, “Multilayer ARROW channel waveguide for evanescent field enhancement in low-index media,” Applied Optics 41, 1385 (2002). 11. S. G. Johnson, M. Ibanescu, M. Skorobogatiy, O. Weisberg, T. D. Engeness, M. Soljacic, S. A. Jacobs, J. D. Joannopoulos, and Y. Fink, “Low-loss asymptotically single-mode propagation in large-core OmniGuide fibers,” Optics Express 9, 748 (2001). 12. C. L. Xu, W. P. Huang, M. S. Stern, and S. K. Chaudhuri, “Full-vectorial mode calculations by finite difference method,” IEE Proc.-Optoelectron. 141, 281 (1994). 13. V. R. Almeida, R. R. Panepucci, and M. Lipson, “Nanotaper for compact mode conversion,” Opt. Lett. 28, 1302 (2003). 14. M. J. Weber, CRC Handbook of Laser Science and Technology, Volume IV optical materials: Part 2 (CRC Press Inc., 1986). 9 nC nS nH nH y z~ nC nC x -b -a 0 a h nH b (a) (b) wH nS wS nH wH y -z x Fig. 1. Schematic of the slot-waveguide structure. (a) With infinite height. (b) With finite height. 10 1.0 Normalized Ex 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -b -400 -a a -200 0 b 200 400 x (nm) Fig. 2. Normalized transverse E-field (Ex) distribution of the fundamental TM eigenmode (solid line) for the slab-based slot-waveguide at λ0 = 1.55 µm, with nH = 3.48, nS = nC = 1.44, a = 25 nm, and b = 205 nm. Also shown are the individual slab-waveguide TM eigenmodes (dotted and dash-dot lines). 11 Fig. 3. Transverse E-field profile of the quasi-TE mode in a SOI-based slot-waveguide. The origin of the coordinates system is located at the center of the waveguide, with a horizontal x-axis and a vertical y-axis. (a) Contour of the E-field amplitude and the E-field lines. (b) 3D surface plot of the E-field amplitude. 12 wH=160 nm wH=180 nm wH=200 nm Normalized Power (%) -2 Pslot 80 60 30 20 40 Islot 20 10 ISi 0 0 20 40 Normalized Intensity (µm ) 40 60 80 100 120 0 140 Slot Width wS (nm) Fig. 4. The normalized optical power in the slot Pslot, the normalized average optical intensity in the slot Islot, and the normalized average optical intensity in silicon ISi, for the fundamental quasi-TE eigenmode of the slot-waveguide. All three quantities are normalized with respect to the total waveguide optical power. 13 30 -2 Pslot I slot 20 20 10 0 1.2 SOI Waveguide ARROW and PBG Waveguide SiO2 Waveguide 1.3 Normalized Intensity (µm ) Normalized Power (%) 30 1.4 1.5 Wavelength (µm) 1.6 10 0 Fig. 5. Wavelength dependence of the normalized optical power Pslot and the normalized average optical intensity Islot in the slot, for wH = 180 nm, wS = 50 nm, and h = 300 nm. Optimal values for the normalized optical intensity of alternative waveguide approaches are indicated for comparison purposes. 14