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. 2018 Feb 14;9(1):665.
doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-03004-6.

Fourier transform spectrometer on silicon with thermo-optic non-linearity and dispersion correction

Affiliations

Fourier transform spectrometer on silicon with thermo-optic non-linearity and dispersion correction

Mario C M M Souza et al. Nat Commun. .

Abstract

Miniaturized integrated spectrometers will have unprecedented impact on applications ranging from unmanned aerial vehicles to mobile phones, and silicon photonics promises to deliver compact, cost-effective devices. Mirroring its ubiquitous free-space counterpart, a silicon photonics-based Fourier transform spectrometer (Si-FTS) can bring broadband operation and fine resolution to the chip scale. Here we present the modeling and experimental demonstration of a thermally tuned Si-FTS accounting for dispersion, thermo-optic non-linearity, and thermal expansion. We show how these effects modify the relation between the spectrum and interferogram of a light source and we develop a quantitative correction procedure through calibration with a tunable laser. We retrieve a broadband spectrum (7 THz around 193.4 THz with 0.38-THz resolution consuming 2.5 W per heater) and demonstrate the Si-FTS resilience to fabrication variations-a major advantage for large-scale manufacturing. Providing design flexibility and robustness, the Si-FTS is poised to become a fundamental building block for on-chip spectroscopy.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
On-chip Fourier transform spectrometer. a Schematic of a MZI with integrated metal microheaters on silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform. b Device cross-section illustrating the quasi-TE mode (energy density) of the strip silicon waveguide and the heated area (light red) when current flows through the microheater. c Optical micrography of the experimental device with a total footprint of 1 mm2 (see fabrication details in the Methods section). d Dark field optical micrography of the MZI arm underneath the heater trails. e SEM image of the broadband power splitter/combiner
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Si-FTS calibration using a tunable laser source. Measurements are performed in the C-band. ac Interferogram at 183.37 THz (1600 nm) as a function of dissipated power in heater H2. The mean power (red trace in a) and the envelope (red trace in b) are subtracted to obtain the curve in c, fitted (dashed-red trace) using Eq. 13. The envelope in b is the absolute value of the interferogram’s Hilbert transform. df Data in blue and red are related to heaters H1 and H2, respectively. d Parameter K(ν) obtained from the non-linear fit, adjusted according to Eq. 14. Error bars are s.d. (95% confidence level). e Non-linear parameters γW,1 = (36.2 ± 0.3) × 10−3 W−1 and γW,2 = (40.5 ± 0.3) × 10−3 W−1 obtained from the non-linear fit. Error bars are s.d. (95% confidence level). f Current vs voltage (IV) response of both heaters and calculated electric resistance. g Experimental (black trace) and calculated (red trace) transmission spectrum of the MZI at non-zero optical delay (0.172 ps). The calculated transmission is obtained using Eq. 15 to extract the MZI transfer function T(ν) shown in h
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Broadband spectrum recovery with the Si-FTS. The parameters used to obtain these plots are summarized in Table 1. a ASE of a C-band EDFA used as the light source. b Theoretical interferogram of the ASE for an ideal (linear TOC, dispersionless, balanced) MZI. c Experimental interferogram, shifted to 0.172 ps and distorted due to differences between the two arms of the MZI. The optical delay axis corresponds to T. The insets show a zoom-in of the interferogram at different optical delays superposed to a cosine (gray traces) at the ASE mean frequency νs = 193.44 THz, highlighting: the oscillations at νs when the envelope varies slowly (blue-colored zoom-in); phase changes when the envelope varies rapidly (green-colored zoom-in). df Experimental (red) and reference (black) PSD at different conditions. The red points are the experimental data obtained from the IFT and the red line is a second-order interpolation curve. d No correction. e Corrected thermo-optic non-linearity, but no dispersion correction nor PSD re-normalization with T(ν). f All effects properly accounted for

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