Chemicals are best recognized by their unique wavelength specific optical absorption signatures in the molecular fingerprint region from λ=3-15μm. In recent years, photonic devices on chips are increasingly being used for chemical and biological sensing. Silicon has been the material of choice of the photonics industry over the last decade due to its easy integration with silicon electronics as well as its optical transparency in the near-infrared telecom wavelengths. Silicon is optically transparent from 1.1 μm to 8 μm with research from several groups in the mid-IR. However, intrinsic material losses in silicon exceed 2dB/cm after λ~7μm (~0.25dB/cm at λ=6μm). In addition to the waveguiding core, an appropriate transparent cladding is also required. Available core-cladding choices such as Ge-GaAs, GaAs-AlGaAs, InGaAs-InP would need suspended membrane photonic crystal waveguide geometries. However, since the most efficient QCLs demonstrated are in the InP platform, the choice of InGaAs-InP eliminates need for wafer bonding versus other choices. The InGaAs-InP material platform can also potentially cover the entire molecular fingerprint region from λ=3-15μm. At long wavelengths, in monolithic architectures integrating lasers, detectors and passive sensor photonic components without wafer bonding, compact passive photonic integrated circuit (PIC) components are desirable to reduce expensive epi material loss in passive PIC etched areas. In this paper, we consider miniaturization of waveguide bends and polarization rotators. We experimentally demonstrate suspended membrane subwavelength waveguide bends with compact sub-50μm bend radius and compact sub-300μm long polarization rotators in the InGaAs/InP material system. Measurements are centered at λ=6.15μm for sensing ammonia 
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                            Modeling Study of Si3N4 Waveguides on a Sapphire Platform for Photonic Integration Applications
                        
                    
    
            Sapphire has various applications in photonics due to its broadband transparency, high-contrast index, and chemical and physical stability. Photonics integration on the sapphire platform has been proposed, along with potentially high-performance lasers made of group III–V materials. In parallel with developing active devices for photonics integration applications, in this work, silicon nitride optical waveguides on a sapphire substrate were analyzed using the commercial software Comsol Multiphysics in a spectral window of 800~2400 nm, covering the operating wavelengths of III–V lasers, which could be monolithically or hybridly integrated on the same substrate. A high confinement factor of ~90% near the single-mode limit was obtained, and a low bending loss of ~0.01 dB was effectively achieved with the bending radius reaching 90 μm, 70 μm, and 40 μm for wavelengths of 2000 nm, 1550 nm, and 850 nm, respectively. Furthermore, the use of a pedestal structure or a SiO2 bottom cladding layer has shown potential to further reduce bending losses. The introduction of a SiO2 bottom cladding layer effectively eliminates the influence of the substrate’s larger refractive index, resulting in further improvement in waveguide performance. The platform enables tightly built waveguides and small bending radii with high field confinement and low propagation losses, showcasing silicon nitride waveguides on sapphire as promising passive components for the development of high-performance and cost-effective PICs. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 2327229
- PAR ID:
- 10567726
- Publisher / Repository:
- MDPI
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Materials
- Volume:
- 17
- Issue:
- 16
- ISSN:
- 1996-1944
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 4148
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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