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  • Performance of an a-Si:H MMI multichannel beam splitter analyzed by computer simulation
    Publication . Costa, João; Almeida, Daniel; Fantoni, Alessandro; Lourenço, Paulo; Fernandes, Miguel; Vieira, Manuela
    Optical power splitters are widely used in many applications and di_erent typologies have been developed for devices dedicated to this function. Among them, the multimode interference design is especially attractive for its simplicity and performance making it a strong candidate for low-cost applications, such as photonics lab-on-chips for biomedical point of care systems. Within this context, splitting the optical beam equally into multiple channels is of fundamental importance to provide reference arms, parallel sensing of di_erent biomarkers and allowing multiplexed reading schemes. From a theoretical point of view, the multimode structure allows implementation of the power splitting function for an arbitrary number of channels, but in practice its performance is limited by lithographic mask imperfections and waveguide width. In this work we analyze multimode waveguide structures, based on amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) over insulator (SiO2), which can be produced by the PECVD deposition technique. The study compares the performance of several 1 to N designs optimized to provide division of the fundamental quasi-TM mode as a function of input polarization and lithographic roughness. The performance is analyzed in terms of output power uniformity and attenuation and is based on numerical simulations using the Beam Propagation Method and Eigenmode Expansion Propagation Methods.
  • Simulation of a parallel waveguide array structure suitable for interrogation scheme in a plasmonic biossensor
    Publication . Costa, João; Fantoni, Alessandro; Lourenço, Paulo; Vieira, Manuela
    Surface plasmon resonance sensors have emerged has one of the most suitable approaches for biosensing. A common approach consists of exciting the plasmons at the interface between a functionalized metal film and a sample medium containing the analyte. The propagation of the surface plasmon is highly dependent on changes of the refractive index of the surrounding environment thus providing a mechanism for sensing. The typical interrogation schemes are based on scanning over the wavelength or the incident angle to search for the resonance condition. These solutions require additional motor-driven rotation stages, prisms or other bulky components, introducing complexity which prevents the fabrication of fully on-chip devices. This work reports a simulation study of an amorphous silicon waveguide structure consisting of an array of parallel surface plasmon interferometers with different propagation lengths, each one comprising a thin layer of gold embedded into a-Si:H waveguide. The surface plasmon modes at the end of the plasmonic structure can interfere constructively or destructively depending on the refractive index of the analyte and the interferometer’s length. The variation of the output intensity at the end of each element of the array provides a convenient interrogation scheme that is suitable for on-chip integration. In this paper we investigate this setup and analyze the output power at the end of the array as a function of the refractive index of the sampling medium. The setup is simulated and characterized by the eigenmode expansion method.
  • Optimisation of a plasmonic parallel waveguide sensor based on amorphous silicon compounds
    Publication . Costa, João; Fantoni, Alessandro; Lourenço, Paulo; Vieira, Manuela
    This work reports the simulation of a plasmonic waveguide sensor working in the visible range based on amorphous silicon compounds. Typical plasmonic sensor interrogation schemes are based on scanning over the wavelength or the incident angle to search for the resonance condition. These solutions usually require expensive or bulky components, such as prisms, motor-driven rotation stages or tunable lasers. In this work we propose an amorphous silicon nitride waveguide structure consisting of an array of parallel surface plasmon interferometers of different lengths, each one comprising a thin layer of aluminium embedded into the waveguide. Using modal decomposition simulations, we show that the variation of the output power at the end of each waveguide array element provides a convenient interrogation scheme. By exploring amorphous silicon compounds that can be deposited by Pressure Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) at low temperatures, we aim to achieve a low-cost fabrication process that is compatible with backend CMOS processing and wavelengths in the visible range.
  • Surface plasmon resonance sensing structure
    Publication . Lourenço, Paulo; Fantoni, Alessandro; Louro, Paula; Costa, João; Vieira, Manuela
    Surface Plasmon Resonance occurs when a polarized electromagnetic field strikes a metallic surface at the separation interface between metal and an insulator. This phenomenon is characterized by the conduction electrons resonant oscillation at the interface, resulting on propagating plasmon waves on the metallic surface. Since this wave is generated at the boundary between the metallic surface and the external medium, these structures are highly sensitive to alterations on the surrounding environment, namely the refractive index, and may be used in sensing structures. The large majority of these devices use noble metals, namely gold or silver, as the active material. These metals present low resistivity, which leads to low optical losses in the visible and near infrared spectrum ranges. Gold shows high environmental stability, which is essential for long-term operation, and silver’s lower stability can be overcome through the deposition of an alumina layer. However, their high cost is a limiting factor if the intended target is large scale manufacturing. In this work, we performed Finite Differences Time Domain simulations on a Surface Plasmon Resonance based sensing structure, considering cost-effective materials such as aluminium for the active metal and hydrogenated amorphous silicon for the waveguide supporting elements, and verified that these structures are able to detect refractive index variations of the surrounding environment at the 1550 µm operating wavelength. This sensing architecture has also been modelled with dispersive materials, losses included, to reflect as much as possible physical reality, revealing good performance capabilities when compared to similar noble metals based devices.
  • Multichannel detector system for surface plasmon resonance biosensors
    Publication . Fernandes, Miguel; Fantoni, Alessandro; Soares, Paulo; Lourenço, Paulo; Vieira, Manuela
    Photonic systems are gaining an important role in the field of medical diagnosis due to the achievable high sensitivity and selectivity and low cost, enabling the fabrication of disposable point of care diagnosis systems for multiple pathologies. In this work we present the detector subsystem developed for a multi-channel surface plasmon resonance (SPR) based sensor. The core of the system is a multimode interferometer splitter, fabricated in amorphous silicon, followed by multiple sensitive SPR structures with a functionalized gold layer that modulate the transmitted light waves, in the presence of the biomarker, which are then detected by infrared detectors. For this purpose a highly adaptable detection system based on a InGaAs line CCD device was developed. The IR sensor used in the prototype has 128 (50 x 250 μm) pixels but other formats are supported. To adapt to different light guiding structures, the CCD pixels can be combined forming multiple detection channels. Optical sensor configuration and readout operations are performed trough a USB connection using the SCPI standard. The system includes an analog front end with a programmable gain amplifier and offset adjustment followed by a fast analog to digital converter feeding the data to a STM32 family processor. A computer application was also developed for system configuration and signal readout and storage. The testing results from the complete system are presented. Documentation of the developed system is provided for third party use, all the material generated within this work is available online in a repository.
  • Silicon nitride based devices: lithographic mask roughness mitigation
    Publication . Lourenço, Paulo; Fantoni, Alessandro; Costa, João; Vieira, Manuela
    Lithographic technology has been one of the main upholders to Moore's law in the semiconductor industry for the last decades. The underlying reason that enabled the evolution in semiconductor industry has been a steady silicon wafer printing cost, while being able to dramatically increase the number of nodes that can be printed per chip. Key developments in lithography such as wavelength decreasing, together with performance increase in lens and imaging technology, should be accounted for almost all the reduction of cost per function in integrated circuits technology. In this work, we will be presenting the simulation of two mitigation techniques for the impact of defects introduced by manufacturing processes. Namely, the lithographic mask limited resolution on the geometry of the representative device. These perturbations are a consequence of the lithographic mask limited resolution on the geometry of the representative device. For this purpose, the Beam Propagation and Finite Differences Time Domain methods will be used to simulate a multimode interference structure based on silicon nitride. The structure will be affected by previously mentioned perturbations and we expect results revealing a strong dependence between mask resolution, and imbalance and power loss. Two strategies will be followed concerning the mitigation of power loss and imbalance introduced by the limited resolution of lithographic mask: - Access waveguides tapering; - Adjustable power splitting ratios through the electro-optic effect. Through both strategies we aim to achieve an improvement on device’s performance but, in the latter are expected finer tuning capabilities, being enabled by dynamic compensation of power loss and imbalance when in a closed loop control architecture.
  • Thin film refractive index and thickness
    Publication . Lourenço, Paulo; Vieira, Manuela; Fantoni, Alessandro
    Integrated optics are a contemporaneous reality in which thin-film technology and methods utilized in the development of integrated circuitry, are applied to both optical circuits and devices. This provides systems that show improved characteristics when compared to their electronic counterparts. Optical systems enable wider bandwidth operation, less power consumption, more immunity to interference and higher cost-efficiency. These features definitely represent a huge improvement in our daily lives when completely embedded in Information and Communications Technologies, replacing a large percentage of contemporaneous electronic based systems. The building blocks of these optical systems consist on waveguides and structures formed by deposited thin films. Two characteristics of utmost importance for these structures are the height and refractive index of the deposited film. In this work and by using a prism coupler, we will be presenting an optical setup and the experimental method that is used to determine both refractive index and thickness of the wave guiding structure.
  • Subwavelength structures for taper waveguides
    Publication . Lourenço, Paulo; Fantoni, Alessandro; Costa, João; Fernandes, Miguel; Vieira, Manuela
    In Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) it is often necessary some sort of mismatch adaptation between waveguides of different cross-sections. There are several instances of such a designing constraint, being the vertical coupling between the PIC and an optical fibre probably the most representative of all examples. Here, the beam of electromagnetic energy inside the PIC must be inserted/extracted through/to an optical fibre. Typical core diameters are approximately 10 µm and 5 µm, for single mode optical fibres operating in the near infrared and visible wavelengths, respectively. On the other hand, the optical interconnects linking individual structures in PICs are usually single mode waveguides, 400 to 500 nm wide and a few hundreds of nanometres thick. This presents a bidimensional mismatch between the optical fibre and the single mode waveguide within the PIC, that requires both lateral and longitudinal beam expansions. In this work, we have approached the lateral expansion of the fundamental mode propagating in a single mode waveguide, at the operating wavelength of 1550 nm and being coupled out into an optical fibre, through a grating structure 14.27 µm wide. To this end, we have designed and simulated a subwavelength metamaterial planar structure, which is able to expand laterally the fundamental mode’s profile from 450 nm to 14.27 µm, within 11.1 µm. Furthermore, we will be presenting the results obtained when comparing this structure with several linear inverted taper waveguides, regarding coupling and propagation efficiencies. Namely, we compared the coupling efficiencies of the modes propagating in an 100 µm long waveguide, when being excited by the analytically calculated fundamental mode and the fields obtained at the end of the designed structure. The results obtained for the designed structure 11.1 µm long and the calculated fundamental mode showed a coupling efficiency of -1.53 dB and -1.20 dB, respectively.
  • Grating coupler design for low-cost fabrication in amorphous silicon photonic integrated circuits
    Publication . Almeida, Daniel; Lourenço, Paulo; Fantoni, Alessandro; Costa, João; Vieira, Manuela
    Photonic circuits find applications in biomedicine, manufacturing, quantum computing and communications. Photonic waveguides are crucial components, typically having cross-section orders of magnitude inferior when compared with other photonic components (e.g., optical fibers, light sources and photodetectors). Several light-coupling methods exist, consisting of either on-plane (e.g., adiabatic and end-fire coupling) or off-plane methods (e.g., grating and vertical couplers). The grating coupler is a versatile light-transference technique which can be tested at wafer level, not requiring specific fiber terminations or additional optical components, like lenses, polarizers or prisms. This study focuses on fully-etched grating couplers without a bottom reflector, made from hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H), deposited over a silica substrate. Different coupler designs were tested, and of these we highlight two: the superimposition of two lithographic masks with different periods and an offset between them to create a random distribution and a technique based on the quadratic refractive-index variation along the device’s length. Results were obtained by 2D-FDTD simulation. The designed grating couplers achieve coupling efficiencies for the TE-like mode over −8 dB (mask overlap) and −3 dB (quadratic variation), at a wavelength of 1550 nm. The coupling scheme considers a 220 nm a-Si:H waveguide and an SMF-28 optical fiber.
  • Metamaterials in waveguide to fiber couplers
    Publication . Lourenço, Paulo; Fantoni, Alessandro; Costa, João; Fernandes, Miguel; Vieira, Manuela
    Coupling light into or out of a photonic integrated circuit is often accomplished by establishing a vertical link between a single mode optical fibre and a resonant waveguide grating, which is then followed by a tapered and a single mode waveguides. For a chip to fibre coupler, the period of the diffraction grating is often apodized to achieve an optimal beam profile at the input of the optical fibre. The tapered waveguide operates as a spot-size converter, expanding laterally the light beam in the single mode waveguide, to match the profile of the fundamental mode of the resonant waveguide grating. In this work, we propose using subwavelength structures to modulate the refractive index of the tapered waveguide for the lateral expansion of the light beam, when operating at the 1550 nm wavelength. The engineered graded index structure is simulated through adequate numerical methods and its performance is analysed in terms of efficiency and mode profile matching. With our proposed inverted taper waveguide, we were able to obtain an adiabatic power transfer and coupling efficiency with the TE fundamental mode of -0.26 dB and -0.92 dB, respectively. This performance has been achieved in a structure 11.1 µm long and 14.27 µm wide. Furthermore, the obtained fields were fed into a resonant waveguide grating to evaluate the coupling efficiency into the fundamental mode of an optical fibre, resulting in an expected performance decrease of 0.1 dB and ~0.6 dB by comparing respectively with the power transfer and coupling efficiency of the resonant waveguide grating when propagating the calculated TE0 mode.