Abstract
Integration of photonic chips with millimeter-scale atomic, micromechanical, chemical, and biological systems can advance science and enable new miniaturized hybrid devices and technology. Optical interaction via small evanescent volumes restricts performance in applications such as gas spectroscopy, and a general ability to photonically access optical fields in large free-space volumes is desired. However, conventional inverse tapers and grating couplers do not directly scale to create wide, high-quality collimated beams for low-loss diffraction-free propagation over many millimeters in free space, necessitating additional bulky collimating optics and expensive alignment. Here, we develop an extreme mode converter, which is a compact planar photonic structure that efficiently couples a 300 nm × 250 nm silicon nitride high-index single-mode waveguide to a well-collimated near surface-normal Gaussian beam with an ≈160 µm waist, which corresponds to an increase in the modal area by a factor of >105. The beam quality is thoroughly characterized, and propagation over 4 mm in free space and coupling back into a single-mode photonic waveguide with low loss via a separate identical mode converter is demonstrated. To achieve low phase error over a beam area that is >100× larger than that of a typical grating coupler, our approach separates the two-dimensional mode expansion into two sequential separately optimized stages, which create a fully expanded and well-collimated Gaussian slab mode before out-coupling it into free space. Developed at 780 nm for integration with chip-scale atomic vapor cell cavities, our design can be adapted for visible, telecommunication, or other wavelengths. The technique can be expanded to more arbitrary phase and intensity control of both large-diameter, free-space optical beams and wide photonic slab modes.
Highlights
IntroductionChip-scale photonic devices have advanced fundamental research in atomic physics[1,2,3,4], time/frequency metrology[5,6,7,8], and biology[9,10,11,12,13], as well as in industrial applications such as telecommunications[14,15,16] and light detection and ranging (LIDAR)[17,18,19]
We present an extreme mode converter that can interface with the photonic mode in a waveguide and the Gaussian beam in a free space
Modeling: a two-stage extreme mode converter The extreme mode converter consists of two stages: stage 1 is an expander that converts the photonic waveguide mode into the slab mode and stage 2 is an apodized grating that couples out the slab mode into free space
Summary
Chip-scale photonic devices have advanced fundamental research in atomic physics[1,2,3,4], time/frequency metrology[5,6,7,8], and biology[9,10,11,12,13], as well as in industrial applications such as telecommunications[14,15,16] and light detection and ranging (LIDAR)[17,18,19] In many such applications, efficient coupling of nanophotonic circuits with engineered, applicationspecific free-space optical fields in millimeter-scale volumes has opened up a broad range of possibilities for chip-scale, highly integrated sensors and systems. Grating couplers are the most widely known approach to interfacing a photonic mode and a radiation mode;[20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39]
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