Solid state wideband fourier transform infrared spectrometer
10156476 ยท 2018-12-18
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01J3/0205
PHYSICS
International classification
G01J3/10
PHYSICS
Abstract
A compact, low cost FTIR spectrometer with no moving parts includes an interferometer having optical paths through silicon waveguides. The optical path lengths are varied by changing the temperature and/or carrier density of at least one of the waveguides. In embodiments, the interferometer is a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. Embodiments vary both optical path lengths in opposite directions. In embodiments, a germanium or InGaAs IR detector is grown on the same wafer as the waveguides. Embodiments include a laser pump, such as a COT CW diode laser, and wavelength mixer, such as an OPGaAs or OPGaP converter, for up and/or down converting measured IR wavelengths into a range compatible with the waveguide and detector materials. The wavelength mixer can be a waveguide. Embodiments include a sample compartment and an IR source such as a glowbar. In embodiments, the sample compartment can be exposed to ambient atmosphere for analysis of gases contained therein.
Claims
1. A Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) Spectrometer, comprising: a controller; an optical signal input; an optical interferometer configured to receive an FTIR input wave from said optical signal input, said optical interferometer having at least two light paths, each of said light paths being directed through a waveguide comprising a waveguide material, all of said light paths being fixed in physical length, at least one of said light paths being configured as a diode and being variable in optical length by changing an electrical bias condition of the diode under control of said controller; and an infrared detector, configured to receive and detect an output of the optical interferometer; said controller being further configured to analyze the detected output of the optical interferometer, and determine therefrom a Fourier transform infrared spectrum of the FTIR input wave.
2. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 1, wherein the interferometer is a Mach-Zehnder interferometer having two light paths.
3. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 2, wherein the optical lengths of both of the two light paths are variable in optical length under control of said controller.
4. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 1, wherein said waveguide material is silicon.
5. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 1, wherein the waveguide is formed on a silicon wafer, and the FTIR detector is a germanium detector that is grown on the silicon wafer.
6. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 1, wherein the waveguide is formed on a silicon wafer, and includes heterogeneous integration of an indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) detector diode as the FTIR detector.
7. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 1, further comprising a wavelength converter, said wavelength converter comprising a pump laser and an optical mixing medium.
8. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 7, wherein the optical mixing medium is OpGaAs.
9. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 7, wherein optical mixing medium is LiNbO.sub.4 (LN) or Zinc Germanium Phosphide.
10. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 7, wherein the optical mixing medium is included in a mixing waveguide device.
11. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 7, wherein the pump laser comprises a COT CW diode laser.
12. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 1, further comprising a sample compartment configured to contain an FTIR test sample and to allow an infrared measurement wave to pass through the FTIR test sample, said FTIR input wave being derived from said infrared measurement wave.
13. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 12, further comprising an onboard active FTIR light source configured to generate the infrared measurement wave.
14. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 13, wherein the onboard active light source is a glowbar.
15. The FTIR spectrometer of claim 12, wherein the sample compartment can be configured to be in gas communication with a surrounding atmosphere for analysis of the gases contained therein.
16. A method for performing Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrometry comprising the steps of: producing an infrared wave; passing the infrared wave through a sample; mixing the infrared wave with an incoming pump wave; producing an auxiliary wave, wherein the auxiliary wave is produced from mixing the infrared wave with the pump wave, wherein the auxiliary wave has a wavelength within a usable range of a first waveguide, a second waveguide, and a detector, said first and second waveguides being fixed in physical length, the second waveguide being configured as a diode; splitting the auxiliary wave into a first beam and a second beam; passing the first beam through the first waveguide, wherein the first waveguide has a first optical length; passing the second beam through the second waveguide, wherein the second waveguide has a second optical length; varying an index of refraction of the second waveguide by changing an electrical bias condition of the diode under control of a controller, wherein varying the index of refraction of the second waveguide controls and varies a difference between the second optical length and the first optical length; causing the first and second beams to converge; using the detector to detect an interference between the first and second beams as a function of the difference between the second optical length and the first optical length; and determining from the detected interference a Fourier transform infra-red spectrum of the sample.
17. The method of claim 16, further comprising changing an index of refraction of the first waveguide, such that one of the first optical length and the second optical length is increased, while the other of the first optical length and the second optical length is decreased.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) With reference to
(7) The use of silicon for the waveguide material significantly reduces the cost of manufacturing the interferometer 102. In embodiments, a typical 6 silicon wafer can yield several hundred such devices. In various embodiments, a germanium detector 106 is grown on the wafer, thus simplifying the packaging and reducing cost still further. Other embodiments include heterogeneous integration of an indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) detector diode.
(8) In the embodiment of
(9) The use of silicon waveguides 104 and germanium detectors 106 or InGaAs detectors in various embodiments limits the operating wavelength range of the interferometer 102 to between 1.2 m (onset of absorption of the silicon waveguide) and 1.6 m (absorption edge of the germanium detector) or 1.8 m (absorption edge of an InGaAs detector). However, this small working range can be expanded by up-converting longer wavelengths and down-converting shorter wavelengths so that they fall within the useful range of the interferometer/detector combination. In the embodiment of
(10) In the embodiment of
(11) In various embodiments, the laser 108 is configured to be tuned to cover the band of interest. In some embodiments, a proper choice of laser materials allows the complete IR band to be measured, while in other embodiments the laser is configured to measure only a limited wavelength band where absorption lines of interest are known to exist.
(12) In exemplary embodiments of the present invention, the spectrometer is used in a standoff configuration, wherein the sample to be measured is located at some distance from the spectrometer. With reference to
(13) Materials such as LiNbO.sub.4 (LN), Zinc Germanium Phosphide (ZGP), and many other materials, some of which are well established and others of which are still under development, possess both transparency and high optical polarizability and can be used in various embodiments in place of OpGaAs 110 as an up-converting and/or down-converting medium. Through non-linear optical mixing, a desired IR band can thereby be translated so that it falls with the usable range of the Si waveguides 104 and the integrated Ge detectors 106, thereby enabling them to detect a broader range of compounds at their fundamental ID wavelengths, where the distinguishing spectral features are stronger.
(14) As noted above, the incoming signal can be mixed with an on-board 108 laser using either Difference Frequency Mixing (DFM), or Sum Frequency Mixing (SFM). Either technique is usable, but for simplicity only DFM is described herein. One of skill in the art will readily perceive how SFM can be applied in a similar manner.
(15) The recent perfection of parallel technology in both non-linear poled materials such as OpGaAs and Si-photonics platforms is a key enabler of the present invention. With reference to
(16) The first wave, 1, is the input signal, and is incident on the crystal 110 with a small input intensity I1(0). A second wave, 3, the pump, is an intense wave that provides power to the mixer 110. The newly generated converted wave, 2, is an auxiliary wave created by this interaction process. In the DFM case, 2 represents the up-converted frequency suitable for injection into the silicon waveguide 104. Energy conversion dictates that
2=31(1).
(17) The coherent growth of the preferred optical frequencies along the axis of propagation is assured by the matching of the different frequency fields with dispersion invoked momentum matching, according to
k3=k1+k2(2)
Which can be written
3=1+2(3)
(18) as illustrated in
(19) The weak input beams 1 are collected and guided into the converter material volume 110 and mixed with the output of the driving pump laser 108. The high intensity of the pump beam 3, in conjunction with the input beam 1, deforms the charge clouds surrounding the molecules of the converter material. The beat of these two beams 1, 3 drives the high order wave propagation, such that new electric fields are generated. Due to the natural or engineered dispersion of the converter material, as illustrated in
(20)
(21) As can be seen from the figure, by varying the central wavelength of the pump laser 108, the two aforementioned spectral inputs can be converted into the detector's spectral response window by varying the pump wavelength from 1.04 to 1.09 um. In some embodiments, cyclooctatetraene (COT) CW laser diodes are used to meet these requirements, while in other embodiments a broadband laser source such as a CW laser diode pumped broadband laser having this range of spectral output is used.
(22) Additionally, in some embodiments waveguide devices constructed of these new converter materials allow very small, commercially available COT laser diodes to generate the baseband spectral inputs (BBSI) from approximately 1.2 to 1.6 microns that are required by these Si/SiO.sub.2 filter devices. The CW outputs of these COT laser diodes, typically with output powers as low as 1-10 milliwatts, experience long interaction lengths in the guided modes of the waveguides, which efficiently converts, for example, the long-wave, information-rich spectral telltale signatures in the signal to the BBSI wavelength range. The relative spectral locations, widths, and intensities are thereby mapped into the converted wavelengths.
(23) This waveguide conversion approach overcomes the natural tendency of tightly focused optical drive or pump beams to diverge, and thereby maintains the beam intensities that are required for conversion. This enables the use of simple CW pumps, which provide electrical and optical simplicity, because it eliminates the need for short-pulse pump lasers, which typically require complex and inefficient electro-optical components and accompanying high flux and peak power levels that are known to place stress on other material in the beam path.
(24) The foregoing description of the embodiments of the invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. Each and every page of this submission, and all contents thereon, however characterized, identified, or numbered, is considered a substantive part of this application for all purposes, irrespective of form or placement within the application.
(25) This specification is not intended to be exhaustive. Although the present application is shown in a limited number of forms, the scope of the invention is not limited to just these forms, but is amenable to various changes and modifications without departing from the spirit thereof. One or ordinary skill in the art should appreciate after learning the teachings related to the claimed subject matter contained in the foregoing description that many modifications and variations are possible in light of this disclosure. Accordingly, the claimed subject matter includes any combination of the above-described elements in all possible variations thereof, unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. In particular, the limitations presented in dependent claims below can be combined with their corresponding independent claims in any number and in any order without departing from the scope of this disclosure, unless the dependent claims are logically incompatible with each other.