| Literature DB >> 28788565 |
Joanna Ptasinski1,2, Iam-Choon Khoo3, Yeshaiahu Fainman4.
Abstract
In this work we explore the negative thermo-optic properties of liquid crystal claddings for passive temperature stabilization of silicon photonic integrated circuits. Photonic circuits are playing an increasing role in communications and computing, but they suffer from temperature dependent performance variation. Most existing techniques aimed at compensation of thermal effects rely on power hungry Joule heating. We show that integrating a liquid crystal cladding helps to minimize the effects of a temperature dependent drift. The advantage of liquid crystals lies in their high negative thermo-optic coefficients in addition to low absorption at the infrared wavelengths.Entities:
Keywords: liquid crystals; passive tuning; ring resonator; silicon photonics; thermal stabilization; thermo-optic coefficient
Year: 2014 PMID: 28788565 PMCID: PMC5453267 DOI: 10.3390/ma7032229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1.Simulation showing a resonance shift due to rising temperature for a ring resonator clad in silicon dioxide.
Room temperature properties of liquid crystals used in the experiment.
| Liquid Crystal Mixture | Clearing Point | Optical Anisotropy
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Δ | < | ||||
| 5CB (@22 °C, 589 nm) | 35 °C | 0.191 | 1.725 | 1.534 | 1.598 |
| E7 (@20 °C, 589 nm) | 58 °C | 0.226 | 1.747 | 1.521 | 1.597 |
| Lixon (@25 °C, 589 nm) | 123 °C | 0.109 | 1.596 | 1.487 | 1.523 |
| MDA-05-2968 (@20 °C, 589 nm) | 109.5 °C | 0.2685 | 1.781 | 1.5125 | 1.602 |
Summary of results appearing in Figure 2.
| Liquid Crystal Cladding | Resonance shift/°C | Measured Temperature Range |
|---|---|---|
| 5CB | 40 pm | 24 – 32 °C |
| E7 | 56.3 pm | 24 – 56 °C |
| MDA-05-2968 | 58 pm | 24 – 74 °C |
| Lixon | 52.3 pm | 24 – 46 °C |
Figure 2.Measured ring resonator samples clad in liquid crystal (LC) mixtures.
Figure 3.Peak wavelength shift for 5CB clad resonator. The thermal drift is 40 pm/°C.
Figure 4.(A) Measured resonance shift in air of a ring resonator; (B) Simulated shift of a ring resonator clad in air as a function of rising temperature.
Change in the effective index as a function of a 30 °C increase in temperature and the corresponding thermo-optic coefficient of the liquid crystal mixture at 1550 nm.
| Liquid crystal cladding | Effective index shift for a 30 °C rise in temperature | LC Δ |
|---|---|---|
| 5CB | Δ | −0.00087/°C |
| E7 | Δ | −0.00067/°C |
| Lixon | Δ | −0.00072/°C |
| MDA-05-2968 | Δ | −0.00065/°C |
Figure 5.Silicon rectangular waveguide core width and the corresponding TE-like mode power density that extends into the cladding region. The waveguide height was kept constant at 250 nm. The cladding region refractive index was n = 1.53.
Figure 6.Fabrication process steps.
Figure 7.Fabricated ring resonator samples. (A) Close up of the ring resonator structure; (B) Ring resonator with a window etched in SiO2 for liquid crystals.
Figure 8.Optical setup.