Systems and methods for photonic polarization rotators
US-10209448-B2 · Feb 19, 2019 · US
US11002911B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11002911-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715656331-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 21, 2017 |
| Priority date | Jul 22, 2016 |
| Publication date | May 11, 2021 |
| Grant date | May 11, 2021 |
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A polarization-independent, optical circulator is formed in silicon photonics. The polarization-independent, optical circulator uses an optical splitter having two couplers and two waveguides joining the two couplers. One of the two waveguides is thinner than the other to create a large effective index difference between TE and TM modes transmitted through the one waveguide. Polarization rotators, including reciprocal and/or non-reciprocal rotators, are further used to create the optical circulator.
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What is claimed is: 1. A device to be used in a semiconductor-waveguide, polarization-independent, optical isolator and/or circulator, the device comprising: an input; a first output; a second output; a first coupler optically coupled with the input; a second coupler optically coupled with the first output and the second output; a first waveguide optically coupling the first coupler with the second coupler, wherein the first waveguide has a first geometry; and a second waveguide optically coupling the first coupler with the second coupler, wherein: the first coupler, the second coupler, the first waveguide, and the second waveguide are part of a polarization splitter; the second waveguide has a second geometry; and the first geometry is different from the second geometry, wherein the first geometry is different from the second geometry by the first geometry comprising a taper and the second geometry not comprising a taper. 2. The device of claim 1 , wherein the first geometry is further different from the second geometry by the first waveguide having a cross-sectional width that is narrower than a cross-sectional width of the second waveguide, wherein the cross-sectional width is measured in a direction orthogonal to a direction of beam propagation. 3. The device of claim 1 , wherein the first geometry is further different from the second geometry by the first waveguide having a cross-sectional height that is shorter than a cross-sectional height of the second waveguide, wherein the cross-sectional height is measured in a direction orthogonal to a direction of beam propagation. 4. The device of claim 1 , wherein: the first geometry is further different from the second geometry by the first waveguide having a cross-sectional dimension that is less than a cross-sectional dimension of the second waveguide; and cross-sectional dimension is measured in a direction orthogonal to a direction of beam propagation. 5. The device of claim 1 , wherein the first coupler is separated from the second coupler by a distance between 80 and 250 microns, or between 100 and 200 microns. 6. The device of claim 1 , wherein the first waveguide has a thickness between 1.0 and 2.5 microns, measured in a direction orthogonal to beam propagation. 7. The device of claim 1 , wherein the input, the first output, the second output, the first coupler, the second coupler, the first-waveguide, and the second waveguide are integrated on a silicon substrate. 8. The device of claim 1 , wherein: the input, the first output, the second output, the first coupler, the second coupler, the first waveguide, and the second waveguide are part of a first polarization splitter; and the device further comprises: a second polarization splitter, a first path optically coupling the first polarization splitter with the second polarization splitter wherein the first path optically couples with the first output, a second path optically coupling the first polarization splitter with the second polarization splitter, wherein the second path optically couples with the second output, a first port optically coupled with the first polarization splitter, wherein the first port is the input, a second port optically coupled with the second polarization splitter, a first non-reciprocal polarization rotator in the first path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter, a second non-reciprocal polarization rotator in the second path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter, a first reciprocal polarization rotator in the first path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter, and a second reciprocal polarization rotator in the second path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter. 9. A method of using a device in a polarization-independent, optical isolator and/or circulator, the method comprising: transmitting an optical beam to an input, wherein the input is optically coupled with a first coupler; separating, using the first coupler, the optical beam into a first portion and a second portion; transmitting the first portion through a first waveguide to a second coupler wherein the first waveguide has a first geometry; transmitting the second portion through a second waveguide to the second coupler, wherein the second waveguide has a second geometry, and the first geometry is different from the second geometry; interfering, at the second coupler, the first portion of the optical beam with the second portion of the optical beam to separate a TE component of the optical beam from a TM component of the optical beam; transmitting the TE component of the optical beam to a first output, wherein the first output is optically coupled with the second coupler; and transmitting the TM component of the optical beam to a second output, wherein the second output is optically coupled with the second coupler, wherein the first geometry is different from the second geometry by the first geometry comprising a taper and the second geometry not comprising a taper. 10. The method of claim 9 , wherein: the first geometry is further different from the second geometry by the first waveguide having a cross-sectional dimension that is less than a cross-section dimension of the second waveguide; and cross-section dimension is measured in a direction orthogonal to a direction of beam propagation. 11. The method of claim 9 , wherein the first coupler is separated from the second coupler by a distance between 80 and 250 microns, or between 100 and 200 microns. 12. The method of claim 9 , wherein the input, the first output, the second output, the first coupler, the second coupler, the first waveguide, and the second waveguide are integrated on a silicon substrate. 13. The method of claim 9 , further comprising transmitting the first portion of the optical beam through a taper section of the first waveguide. 14. A device comprising: a first polarization splitter comprising: a first coupler, a second coupler, a first waveguide coupling the first coupler with the second coupler, wherein the first waveguide has a first geometry, and a second waveguide coupling the first coupler with the second coupler, wherein the second waveguide has a second geometry, and the first geometry is different from the second geometry; a second polarization splitter; a first path optically coupling the first polarization splitter with the second polarization splitter; a second path optically coupling the first polarization splitter with the second polarization splitter; a first port optically coupled with the first polarization splitter; a second port optically coupled with the second polarization splitter; a first non-reciprocal polarization rotator in the first path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter; a second non-reciprocal polarization rotator in the second path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter; a first reciprocal polarization rotator in the first path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter; and a second reciprocal polarization rotator in the second path between the first polarization splitter and the second polarization splitter, wherein the first geometry is different from the second geometry by the first geometry comprising a taper and the second geometry not comprising a taper. 15. The device of claim 14 , wherein: the first geometry is further different from the second geometry by the first waveguide ha
used as non-reciprocal devices, e.g. optical isolators, circulators (G02F1/0955 takes precedence) · CPC title
comprising non-reciprocal devices, e.g. isolators, FRM, circulators, quasi-isolators (magneto-optic non-reciprocal devices G02F1/093) · CPC title
using polarisation effects {(G02B6/1226 takes precedence)} · CPC title
Splitter · CPC title
Tapered waveguides, e.g. integrated spot-size transformers (for coupling with fibres G02B6/305) · CPC title
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