METHODS AND DEVICES FOR EVANESCENTLY COUPLING LIGHT HAVING DIFFERENT WAVELENGTHS TO AN OPEN DIELECTRIC RESONATOR
20200313270 ยท 2020-10-01
Inventors
- Lute Maleki (Pasadena, CA)
- Anatoliy A. Savchenko (Glendale, CA, US)
- Danny Eliyahu (Pasadena, CA, US)
- Wei Liang (Monrovia, CA, US)
- Vladimir S. Ilchenko (Arcadia, CA, US)
- Andrey B. Matsko (Pasadena, CA)
Cpc classification
G02B6/29341
PHYSICS
G02B6/29332
PHYSICS
H01S3/0085
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
One feature pertains to an apparatus that includes apparatus that includes an evanescent field coupler having a first surface that evanescently couples light between the evanescent field coupler and an open dielectric resonator. The apparatus also includes a thin film coating covering at least a portion of the first surface of the evanescent field coupler. The thin film coating is specifically designed so that the thin film coating reflects light of a first wavelength.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: an evanescent field coupler having a first surface configured to evanescently couple light between the evanescent field coupler and an open dielectric resonator; and a thin film coating covering at least a portion of the first surface of the evanescent field coupler and configured to increase reflection of light of a first wavelength.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the thin film coating is configured to increase reflection of light of the first wavelength relative to light of a second wavelength that is different than the first wavelength.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the thin film coating includes a plurality of layers.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the plurality of layers include a first set of layers composed of a first material and a second set of layers composed of a second material, the first set of layers interleaved with the second set of layers to form an alternating layer structure.
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the first material and the second material have different indexes of refraction, and the refractive index of the first material, the refractive index of the second material, and a selected thickness of each layer of the plurality of layers cause constructive interference of light of the first wavelength at the thin film coating to increase reflection of light of the first wavelength when light of the first wavelength is incident upon the first surface of the coupler and/or a surface of the open dielectric resonator at a grazing angle less than 0.1 radians.
6. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the plurality of layers each have at least one of a different thickness and/or a different index of refraction.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, the thin film coating is configured to increase reflection of light of the first wavelength when light of the first wavelength is incident upon the first surface of the coupler and/or a surface of the open dielectric resonator at a grazing angle less than 0.1 radians.
8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the thin film coating operates as a wavelength selective dielectric mirror that reflects more than 90% of the power of the light of the first wavelength.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the thin film coating is further configured to decrease the coupling efficiency of light of the first wavelength and boost loaded quality factor Q of light of the first wavelength propagating within the open dielectric resonator.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the evanescent field coupler is a prism or a waveguide.
11. A method comprising: providing an evanescent field coupler having a first surface configured to evanescently couple light out from the evanescent field coupler and into an open dielectric resonator and couple light out from the open dielectric resonator and into the evanescent field coupler; selecting a first wavelength of light; and applying a thin film coating to at least a portion of the first surface of the evanescent field coupler, the thin film coating configured to enhance reflection of light of the first wavelength.
12. The method of claim 11, further comprising: selecting and adjusting one or more thin film coating properties of the thin film coating to enhance reflection of light of the first wavelength.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the thin film coating properties include a number of layers of the thin film coating, a material for each layer of the thin film coating, an index of refraction for each layer of the thin film coating, and a thickness for each layer of the thin film coating.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein the thin film coating is configured to increase reflection of light of the first wavelength relative to light of a second wavelength that is different than the first wavelength.
15. The method of claim 11, wherein applying a thin film coating includes: forming a plurality of alternating layers over the portion of the first surface of the evanescent field coupler.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the plurality of alternating layers are each composed of one of two different materials and each layer of the plurality of layers has a different thickness.
17. The method of claim 11, wherein applying a thin film coating includes: forming a plurality of layers over the portion of the first surface of the evanescent field coupler, each layer of the plurality of layers having a different index of refraction for a given wavelength of light.
18. A system comprising: a light source configured to generate coherent light having a first wavelength and a second wavelength, the second wavelength substantially different than the first wavelength; an open dielectric resonator; and an evanescent field coupler having a first surface configured to evanescently couple light between the evanescent field coupler and the open dielectric resonator and a second surface through which the evanescent field coupler transmits and receives light to and from the light source, wherein the evanescent field coupler's first surface includes a thin film coating that is configured to decrease light coupling efficiency between the evanescent field coupler and the open dielectric coupler for light of the first wavelength relative to light coupling efficiency of the second wavelength, and the thin film coating further configured to boost loaded quality factor Q for light of the first wavelength within the open dielectric resonator.
19. The system of claim 18, wherein the open dielectric resonator is a monolithic whispering gallery mode resonator.
20. The system of claim 18, wherein the thin film coating includes a plurality of layers for which thin film coating properties are selected to increase reflectance of light of the first wavelength through the thin film coating relative to light of the second wavelength through the thin film coating.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
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[0016]
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[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
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[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] In the following description, specific details are given to provide a thorough understanding of the various aspects of the disclosure. However, it will be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the aspects may be practiced without these specific details. For example, circuits may be shown in block diagrams in order to avoid obscuring the aspects in unnecessary detail. In other instances, well-known circuits, structures and techniques may not be shown in detail in order not to obscure the aspects of the disclosure.
[0026] The word exemplary is used herein to mean serving as an example, instance, or illustration. Any implementation or aspect described herein as exemplary is not necessarily to be construed as preferred or advantageous over other aspects of the disclosure. Likewise, an aspect is an implementation or example. Reference in the specification to an aspect, one aspect, some aspects, various aspects, or other aspects means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the aspects is included in at least some aspects, but not necessarily all aspects, of the present techniques. The various appearances of an aspect, one aspect, or some aspects are not necessarily all referring to the same aspects. Elements or aspects from an aspect can be combined with elements or aspects of another aspect.
[0027] Not all components, features, structures, characteristics, etc. described and illustrated herein need be included in a particular aspect or aspects. If the specification states a component, feature, structure, or characteristic may, might, can or could be included, for example, that particular component, feature, structure, or characteristic is not required to be included. If the specification or claim refers to a or an element, that does not mean there is only one of the element. If the specification or claims refer to an additional element, that does not preclude there being more than one of the additional element.
[0028] It is to be noted that, although some aspects have been described in reference to particular implementations, other implementations are possible according to some aspects. Additionally, the arrangement and/or order of circuit elements or other features illustrated in the drawings and/or described herein need not be arranged in the particular way illustrated and described. Many other arrangements are possible according to some aspects.
[0029] In each figure, the elements in some cases may each have a same reference number or a different reference number to suggest that the elements represented could be different and/or similar. However, an element may be flexible enough to have different implementations and work with some or all of the systems shown or described herein. The various elements shown in the figures may be the same or different. Which one is referred to as a first element and which is called a second element is arbitrary.
[0030]
[0031] The loaded quality factor Q of an open dielectric resonator depends on many factors including the type and shape of the resonator. For example, the loaded quality factor Q of a spherical resonator may be approximated by the formula:
where n.sub.p and n.sub.r are the wavelength () dependent refractive indexes of the coupler and the resonator, l is the azimuthal index of the whispering gallery mode, and d is the shortest distance from the coupler's surface to the resonator. It may be observed that for a fixed distance d between the coupler and the resonator, the loaded quality factor (Q) of the resonator decreases as the wavelength of light increases. Thus, in the example shown in
[0032] To help equalize the loaded quality factor Q values of the resonator for light having different wavelengths .sub.1 and .sub.2, the evanescent field coupler 104 shown in
[0033]
[0034]
[0035] The alternating layers 302a, 302b, . . . 302k have thicknesses t.sub.1, t.sub.2 and refractive indexes n.sub.1, n.sub.2 that have been specifically selected so that the path-length differences for reflections 310a, 310b, 310c from different high-index n.sub.1 layers are integer multiples of the wavelength .sub.2 for which the thin film coating 308 is designed to reflect. The reflections from the low-index n.sub.2 layers may also have exactly half a wavelength .sub.2 in path length difference compared to high-index n.sub.1 layer reflections, but there is a 180-degree difference in phase shift at a low-to-high index boundary, compared to a high-to-low index boundary, which means that the low-index n.sub.2 reflections are also in phase. This causes constructive interference of the second wavelength .sub.2 light reflected at the boundary interfaces (e.g., reflected light 310a, 310b, 310c, etc.) of the plurality of alternating layers 302a, 302b, . . . 302k, which results in a very large portion of the second wavelength .sub.2 light reflecting away. Thus, only a very small percentage of the second wavelength .sub.2 light may actually reach the bottom layer 302k and be evanescently coupled into the resonator 106.
[0036] By contrast, the optical path lengths through each of the alternating layers 302a, 302b, . . . 302k for the first wavelength .sub.1 light is not specifically designed to promote reflection and thus there is significantly less constructive interference of .sub.1 wavelength light at the coupler's bottom surface 105. Such .sub.1 wavelength light may therefore pass through the thin film coating 308 with substantially less reflective power loss and a greater portion of this light may reach the bottom layer 302k of the thin film coating 308 and be evanescently coupled into the resonator 106.
[0037] Referring to
[0038] The alternating series of layers 302a, 302b, . . . 302k have thicknesses t.sub.1, t.sub.2 so that the path-length differences for reflections 310a, 310b, 310c from different high-index n.sub.1 layers are integer multiples of the wavelength .sub.2 for which the thin film coating 308 is designed to reflect. The reflections from the low-index n.sub.2 layers also have exactly half a wavelength .sub.2 in path length difference compared to high-index n.sub.1 layer reflections, but there is a 180-degree difference in phase shift at a low-to-high index boundary, compared to a high-to-low index boundary, which means that the low-index n.sub.2 reflections are also in phase. This causes constructive interference of the second wavelength .sub.2 light reflected at the boundary interfaces (e.g., reflected light 310a, 310b, 310c, etc.) of the plurality of alternating layers 302a, 302b, . . . 302k, which results in a very large portion of the second wavelength .sub.2 light reflecting away. Thus, only a very small percentage of the second wavelength .sub.2 light actually reaches the bottom layer 302k and be evanescently coupled 311 into the resonator 106.
[0039] By contrast, the optical path lengths through each of the alternating layers 302a, 302b, . . . 302k for first wavelength .sub.1 light 304 is not designed to constructively interfere. This light 304 may thus pass through the thin film coating 308 with substantially less power lost to reflection and a greater portion 314 of such light may reach the bottom layer 302k of the thin film coating 308 and be evanescently coupled 316 into the resonator 106.
[0040] In the example illustrated in
[0041]
[0042] The portion of the light transmitted through into the first layer 302a follows an optical path P.sub.B1 whose length is given by Snell's law as n.sub.1*t.sub.1/cos[sin.sup.1((n.sub.0/n.sub.1)*sin())]. The light continues through the thin film coating 308 entering into the second thin film coating layer 302b. The portion of the light transmitted through into the second layer 302b follows an optical path P.sub.B2 whose length is given by Snell's law as n.sub.2*t.sub.2/cos [sin.sup.1((n.sub.1/n.sub.2)*sin[sin.sup.1((n.sub.0/n.sub.1)*sin())])].
[0043] A portion of the light traveling through the second layer 302b reflects off of the interface boundary between the second layer 302b and the third layer 302c and travels back through the second layer 302b along an optical path P.sub.B3 whose length is equal to P.sub.B2. A portion of the light traveling back through the second layer 302b along the optical path P.sub.B3 enters back into the first layer 302a and travels through the first layer 302a along an optical path P.sub.B4 whose length is equal to P.sub.B1. A portion of this light propagating back through the first layer 302a exits the first layer 302a back into the coupler 104 and represents a second reflected portion 404 of the light's 306 energy.
[0044] The optical path difference (OPD) between the first reflected portion 402 and the second reflected portion 404 is given by the formula:
OPD=P.sub.B1+P.sub.B2+P.sub.B3+P.sub.B4P.sub.A.
In order to facilitate constructive interference of the first and second reflected portions 402, 404 of light, the thin film coating layers 302a, 302b may be designed so that the OPD is an integer multiple of the wavelength .sub.2. For instance, if the OPD is one wavelength .sub.2 in distance then constructive interference between the first and second reflected portions 402, 404 will be realized. Referring to
[0045] Similar design considerations may also be used to ensure that reflections from the low-index n.sub.2 layers (i.e., interface boundaries between first and second layers 302a, 302b, third and fourth layers 302c, 302d, fifth and sixth layers 302e, 302f, etc.) also constructively interfere. To do so, these layers have exactly half a wavelength .sub.2 in path length difference compared to high-index n.sub.1 layer reflections to account for a 180-degree difference in phase shift at a low-to-high index boundary.
[0046]
[0047] In some aspects, the same material may be used in alternating layers (e.g., SiO.sub.2 and TiO.sub.2) so that alternating layers have the same index of refraction but each has a different thickness. In other aspects, the thickness of each layer may be the same but the index of refraction for each layer may be different. Computer simulations may be used to determine and select thin film coating properties such as layer thicknesses, layer materials, indexes of refraction of the layers, and number of layers.
[0048] Tables 5-1, 5-2, and 5-3 below provide details of one non-limiting, non-exclusive example of a thin film coating that has been specifically designed and validated to reflect longer wavelength light (1550 nm) and transmit shorter wavelength light (795 nm). In the example provided the coating has 19 alternating layers that alternate between SiO.sub.2 and TiO.sub.2.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 5-1 Layer Thicknesses Coupler Material BK7 (n = 1.51) Layer 1 (TiO.sub.2) - 620.44 nm Layer 2 (SiO.sub.2) - 418.03 nm Layer 3 (TiO.sub.2) - 376.20 nm Layer 4 (SiO.sub.2) - 746.75 nm Layer 5 (TiO.sub.2) - 116.48 nm Layer 6 (SiO.sub.2) - 425.91 nm Layer 7 (TiO.sub.2) - 325.52 nm Layer 8 (SiO.sub.2) - 424.94 nm Layer 9 (TiO.sub.2) - 316.65 nm Layer 10 (SiO.sub.2) - 922.45 nm Layer 11 (TiO.sub.2) - 335.13 nm Layer 12 (SiO.sub.2) - 420.17 nm Layer 13 (TiO.sub.2) - 113.52 nm Layer 14 (SiO.sub.2) - 413.70 nm Layer 15 (TiO.sub.2) - 113.32 nm Layer 16 (SiO.sub.2) - 413.07 nm Layer 17 (TiO.sub.2) - 114.04 nm Layer 18 (SiO.sub.2) - 411.65 nm Layer 19 (TiO.sub.2) - 88.11 nm Gap d - 200 nm Resonator material MgF.sub.2
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 5-2 Refractive Index Profile for SiO.sub.2 Layers vs. Wavelength Wavelength (nm) Index-n Index-k 434.26 1.47893 0.0 497.4 1.47391 0.0 574.68 1.46883 0.0 695.13 1.46352 0.0 700.0 1.4635 0.0 850.0 1.452 0.0 1550.0 1.448 0.0
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 5-3 Refractive Index Profile for TiO.sub.2 Layers vs. Wavelength Wavelength (nm) Index-n Index-k 366.0 2.34269 0.008956 376.0 2.47584 0.00368 402.0 2.60693 3.0 10.sup.7 432.0 2.50478 0.0 472.0 2.42451 0.0 526.0 2.35817 0.0 604.0 2.33311 0.0 710.0 2.2722 0.0 876.0 2.2169 0.0 1560. 2.2162 0.0
[0049]
[0050] Since less .sub.2 wavelength light is evanescently coupled from the resonator 106 to the coupler 104 than wavelength .sub.1 light, a greater amount of .sub.2 wavelength light 604 remains circulating within the resonator 106 thereby boosting the loaded quality factor Q of the .sub.2 wavelength light. This helps equalize the loaded quality factor Q between the two different wavelengths .sub.1, .sub.2 of light so that they are more equally matched. In this fashion, the thin film coating 608 operates symmetrically to reflect .sub.2 wavelength light and transmit .sub.1 wavelength light emanating from the resonator 106 towards the coupler 104 in addition to such light traveling from the coupler 104 to the resonator 106.
[0051]
[0052] The light 702, 704 within the resonator 106 may be evanescently coupled to the thin film coating 708 where it generates light 710, 712 that propagates through the thin film coating 708. Since the thin film coating 708 is designed to reflect .sub.2 wavelength light 712, significantly less second wavelength .sub.2 light 714 reaches and propagates through the coupler 104 (e.g., back toward the laser 102 (see
[0053] The thin film coating 708 may be designed so that the power P.sub.2 of the .sub.2 wavelength light 714 transmitted from the resonator 106 to the coupler 104 is less than X % of the power P.sub.1 of the .sub.1 wavelength light 716 transmitted from the resonator 106 to the coupler 104. In some as aspects, where X may be any value between 0.1 and 90. For example, in some aspects, the thin film coating 708 may be designed so that the power P.sub.2 of the .sub.2 wavelength light 714 transmitted from the resonator 106 to the coupler 104 is less than 10% of the power P.sub.1 of the .sub.1 wavelength light 716 transmitted from the resonator 106 to the coupler 104.
[0054]
[0055]
[0056]
[0057]
[0058]
[0059] Thus, the thin film coating 108 allows for loaded quality factor Q equalization for two different wavelengths of light for evanescently coupled resonator systems even though such a system's coupler and resonator are spaced apart a fixed distance d that is optimized for only one wavelength.
[0060]
[0061] A coupler having the above described coating may be used in various systems. For example, such a device may be used for efficient lossless retrieval of photons at any wavelength from cavity modes. This may be useful in nonlinear optics systems such as frequency doubling. As another example, such a device may be used to stabilize an open dielectric resonator operating at one wavelength to a reference laser operating at a significantly different wavelength. This is useful for stabilizing lasers and oscillators. As yet another example, such a device may be used to create a wavelength profile of Q factor to achieve operational improvement of an intracavity mode locked laser/frequency comb generator.
[0062] One or more of the components, steps, features, and/or functions illustrated in
[0063] Also, it is noted that the aspects of the present disclosure may be described as a process that is depicted as a flowchart, a flow diagram, a structure diagram, or a block diagram. Although a flowchart may describe the operations as a sequential process, many of the operations can be performed in parallel or concurrently. In addition, the order of the operations may be re-arranged. A process is terminated when its operations are completed. A process may correspond to a method, a function, a procedure, a subroutine, a subprogram, etc.
[0064] The various features of the invention described herein can be implemented in different systems without departing from the invention. It should be noted that the foregoing aspects of the disclosure are merely examples and are not to be construed as limiting the invention. The description of the aspects of the present disclosure is intended to be illustrative, and not to limit the scope of the claims. As such, the present teachings can be readily applied to other types of apparatuses and many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art.