Waveguide polarizing optical device
09823417 ยท 2017-11-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Pascal Simonpietri (Cormeilles en Parisis, FR)
- Stephane Chouvin (Bagneux, FR)
- Cedric Molucon (Saint Germain en Laye, FR)
Cpc classification
G01D5/35322
PHYSICS
G02B6/2726
PHYSICS
G02B6/2706
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is a waveguide polarizing optical device, including a first waveguide polarizer (6), a section of a second optical waveguide (31) and a second thin-plate polarizer (52) having a physical thickness T and a refractive index n, the second thin-plate polarizer (52) being disposed on the optical path between a waveguide end (8) of the first polarizer (6) and one end (32) of the second optical waveguide (31), the physical distance d between the waveguide end (8) of the first polarizer (6) and the end (32) of the second optical waveguide (31) being less than or equal to twice the Rayleigh length and the physical thickness T of the second polarizer (52) being less than or equal to the physical distance d.
Claims
1. A waveguide polarizing optical device characterized in that the waveguide polarizing optical device comprises: a first polarizer, the first polarizer being a waveguide polarizer on an integrated optical circuit, and a section of a second optical waveguide, a second polarizer, the second polarizer being a thin-plate polarizer having a physical thickness T and a refraction index n, and the second thin-plate polarizer being interposed on the optical path between, on the one hand, a waveguide end of the first polarizer, and on the other hand, an end of the second optical waveguide, the physical distance d between said waveguide end of the first polarizer and said end of the second optical waveguide being lower than or equal to twice the Rayleigh length, i.e.
2. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, further comprising: a section of a third optical waveguide, and a third polarizer, the third polarizer being a thin-plate polarizer having a physical thickness U and a refractive index n, the third thin-plate polarizer being interposed on the optical path between, on the one hand, another waveguide end of the first polarizer, and on the other hand, an end of the third optical waveguide, the physical distance g between said other waveguide end of the first polarizer and said end of the third optical waveguide being lower than or equal to twice the Rayleigh length, i.e.
3. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the physical distance d between said waveguide end of the first polarizer and said end of the second optical waveguide is lower than or equal to
4. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the physical distance d between said waveguide end of a first polarizer and said end of the second optical waveguide is lower than or equal to
5. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the second thin-plate polarizer has a physical thickness T lower than or equal to 50 microns and preferably lower than or equal to 30 microns.
6. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the second thin-plate polarizer is formed of a polarizing glass thin plate.
7. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the first waveguide polarizer on an integrated optical circuit is formed by proton exchange on a lithium niobate substrate.
8. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the first polarizer and the second polarizer are linear polarizers having axes of polarization aligned relative to each other.
9. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein said section of a second optical waveguide is a section of polarizing fiber.
10. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 1, wherein the second polarizer is bonded to the waveguide end of the first polarizer and to the end of the second optical waveguide.
11. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the third polarizer is bonded to the waveguide end of the first polarizer and bonded to the end of the third optical waveguide.
12. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the physical distance g between said other waveguide end of the first polarizer and said end of the third optical waveguide is lower than or equal to
13. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the physical distance g between said other waveguide end of the first polarizer and said end of the third optical waveguide is lower than or equal to
14. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the third thin-plate polarizer has a physical thickness U lower than or equal to 50 microns and preferably lower than or equal to 30 microns.
15. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the third thin-plate polarizer is formed of a polarizing glass thin plate.
16. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the first waveguide polarizer on an integrated optical circuit is formed by proton exchange on a lithium niobate substrate.
17. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the first polarizer and the third polarizer are linear polarizers having axes of polarization aligned relative to each other.
18. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein said section of a third optical waveguide is a section of polarizing fiber.
19. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the second polarizer is bonded to the waveguide end of the first polarizer and to the end of the second optical waveguide.
20. The waveguide polarizing optical device according to claim 2, wherein the third polarizer is bonded to the waveguide end of the first polarizer and bonded to the end of the third optical wave guide.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN EXAMPLARY EMBODIMENT
(1) This description, given by way of non-limitative example, will allow to better understand how the invention may be implemented, with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
DEVICES
(8)
(9) A first waveguide polarizer 6 is chosen. Preferably, the first polarizer 6 is a waveguide polarizer integrated on the substrate 10 of an integrated optical circuit. Preferably, the first polarizer 6 is formed by proton exchange on a lithium niobate substrate. In another variant, the first polarizer 6 is a polarizing fiber.
(10) An aspect of the invention consists in selecting a second polarizer 52 operating in transmission and having an ultra-thin thickness. Preferably, the ultra-thin polarizer 52 has a thickness T lower than or equal to 50 microns. Another aspect of the invention consists in placing the second ultra-thin polarizer 52 between the end 8 of the first waveguide polarizer 6 and the end 32 of another waveguide. In
(11) The optical fiber 30 has a core diameter equal to 2a. The waveguide polarizer 6 has a cross-dimension b. Preferably, the cross-dimensions of the optical fiber 30 and of the waveguide polarizer 6 are identical. The longitudinal axes of the optical fiber 30 and of the waveguide polarizer 6 are aligned relative to each other, so as to avoid the optical losses. In an exemplary embodiment, the waveguide 6 is manufactured by proton exchange on a lithium niobate substrate, and the waveguide has, by construction, an elliptic section, with a ratio between the two axes of the ellipse practically equal to two.
(12) The TE polarization axis of the ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 is aligned with the TE polarization axis of the polarizing waveguide 6 before bonding.
(13) Particularly advantageously, the ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 has a parallelepipedal external shape, of 1 mm wide by 2 mm long, with an external facet 520 parallel to a polarization axis of the ultra-thin polarizer 52. Now, the lithium niobate integrated circuit has a lower surface 4 and an upper surface 3 that are planar and parallel to the axis of the waveguide polarizer 6. To align the axis of the ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 to the polarization axis of the waveguide polarizer 6, it is then sufficient to align mechanically the facet 520 of the ultra-thin polarizer 52 to the planar face 3 or 4 of the integrated optical circuit. This mechanical alignment allows limiting to a few tenths of degrees the alignment defect between the axes of the ultra-thin polarizer 52 and of the waveguide polarizer 6. A finer alignment in orientation may then be performed.
(14) The polarizing device 50 of
(15) The polarizing device 40 allows polarizing an incident beam 12 with a polarization extinction ratio far higher than that of the single integrated waveguide polarizer 6. The transmitted beam undergoes a very low attenuation during the transmission through the ultra-thin polarizer 52, although the ultra-thin polarizer is not guiding. The low thickness of the ultra-thin polarizer 52 allows avoiding the losses by divergence of the TE polarized beam.
(16) In
(17) The dimensions 2a and b are chosen so that the optical coupling between the two waveguides is possible, preferably in the two directions of propagation. The mode diameters of the different guides must hence be compatible, which may be made with a great tolerance.
(18) More precisely, the end 32 of the optical fiber 30 is arranged at a physical distance d from the end 8 of the first waveguide polarizer 6, the physical distance d being lower than or equal to twice the length of the Rayleigh zone defined by the following relation:
(19)
where w.sub.0 represents the radius of a single-mode beam in the optical guiding means and .sub.m represents the wavelength of the source beam 100 in the material of the polarizer
(20)
where n represents the refractive index of the material of the polarizer and .sub.0 represents the wavelength of the source beam 100 in vacuum.
(21) The second polarizer 52 is a thin-plate Dolarizer, or ultra-thin polarizer, whose thickness satisfies the condition:
(22)
(23) Advantageously, the ultra-thin polarizer 52 is made of an inorganic material. An inorganic polarizer offers an increased resistance to the intense optical beams and provides the polarizing device with a longer lifetime.
(24) Such an ultra-thin polarizer 52 is for example manufactured by the Corning company under the brand name Polarcor UltraThin Glass Polarizers. Such an ultra-thin polarizer 52 is consisted of a polarizing glass plate having a thickness of about 30 microns10 microns. The dimensions of an ultra-thin polarizer may be defined as a function of the needs of the application, except the thickness. For example, an ultra-thin polarizer having a width of 1 mm and a length of 2 mm is used. An ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 has generally a polarization rejection ratio of 20 dB able to go up to 23 dB according to the manufacturer specification. The spectral band of transmission of the ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 is located in the near infrared (about 1310 nm and 1550 nm).
(25) A thin-plate polarizer has the advantage to have a bandwidth of several tens of nanometers (for example 1275-1345 nm or 1510-1590 nm). The bandwidth of the thin-plate polarizer is hence more extended than the spectral band of the source. The thin-plate polarizer does not reduce the bandwidth of the polarizing device. It is observed that the bandwidth of the thin-plate polarizer is more extended than that of a polarizing optical fiber. Indeed, the bandwidth of a polarizing fiber is generally of 40 to 60 nm. Moreover, the bandwidth of an optical fiber may further be reduced due to the curvatures of the fiber. On the other hand, these fibers eliminate the fast polarization and not the slow polarization. Now, a proton-exchange lithium-niobate integrated optical circuit let the fast polarization pass through. Spurious signals of the polarizing fiber may then interfere with the useful signal of the integrated optical circuit.
(26) In a variant, the other waveguide 31 is a waveguide integrated on an integrated optical circuit.
(27) In the embodiment illustrated in
(28) The arrangement of
(29) The extinction ratio of the two polarizers 6, 52 in series is improved by about 25 dB to 35 dB. Advantageously, the waveguide polarizer 6 on IOC has a rejection ratio of 45 dB to 65 dB, which allows obtaining a polarizing device 50 having a total polarization rejection ratio of about 70 dB to 100 dB.
(30) It can be noticed that the mounting of
(31) Advantageously, the second polarizer 52 extends over the face of the substrate 2 of the integrated optical circuit that is transverse to the polarizing waveguide 6. That way, the second polarizer 52 allows attenuating the transmission of spurious beams between the optical fiber 30 and the substrate 10 of the integrated optical circuit, and that in the two directions of propagation.
(32) The polarizing device 50 is formed of at least one first waveguide polarizer 6, a second thin-plate polarizer 52 and another waveguide 31. Such a polarizing device 50 is easily inserted on the optical path between a source and a detector, for example.
(33) Thanks to the polarizing device 50, an optical beam coming from a light source is linearly polarized in series, for example in transmission, via the first polarizer 6, then the second polarizer 52. This polarizing device 50 allows increasing the polarization rejection ratio without increasing the bulkiness of the integrated optical circuit and without inducing additional losses on the transmitted beam.
(34) On the contrary, it is observed that these results do not apply to a more common, polarizing thin film polarizer on a glass substrate, as for example a glass polarizer Polarcor of the Corning company formed of two polarizing thin films of 30 to 50 micrometers of thickness, deposited on the two opposite faces of a glass plate of 0.5 to 0.15 mm thick. Such a thin film polarizer has yet a very high polarization rejection ratio of at least 40 dB, which makes it a priori more interesting in the searched application. Indeed, it is searched to maximize the polarization rejection ratio of a polarizing device, to ideally target a polarization rejection ratio of 90 dB to 100 dB. However, such a polarizing thin film polarizer on a glass substrate leads to too high losses in the transmitted beam, of about 5 dB, at each passage through a polarizing thin film polarizer.
(35) Within the framework of the present invention, the result obtained with an ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 arranged in series with the waveguide polarizer 6 is analysed as follows, in relation with
(36) Let's consider a single-mode Gaussian beam propagating in the waveguide 6 on an integrated optical circuit. The cross-dimension of the waveguide is noted b. The diameter of the single-mode Gaussian beam propagating in the waveguide 6 is noted: 2w.sub.0.
(37) At the end 8 of the waveguide 6, the propagation of the Gaussian beam in free space is performed along the longitudinal direction Z following two distinct regimes. In a so-called near-field, first part between the end of the waveguide 6 and a distance called the Rayleigh length, the beam propagates with an almost null divergence. The Rayleigh length L.sub.R is defined as follows:
(38) Let's N be such that 2w.sub.o=N.sub.m
(39)
(40) Hence the approximation:
(41)
(42) In a so-called far-field, second part, beyond the Rayleigh length, the beam propagates with a divergence having an angular aperture equal to , defined as follows:
(43)
(44) Hence the approximation:
(45)
(46) where N represents the number of wavelengths contained in 2w.sub.0 of the optical fiber 20.
(47) For a cross-dimension b of the waveguide equal to 6 microns, a wavelength in vacuum equal to .sub.0=1.55 m, the diameter of the single-mode beam is 2w.sub.0 equal to about 8 m, and the Rayleigh length is equal to about 48 microns in a medium of index n=1.5. In a zone, called the Rayleigh zone, extending over a length L.sub.R from the end 8 of the waveguide 6 and of diameter 2w.sub.0, the beam divergence is almost null, the beam diameter thus remains equal to 2w.sub.0=8 microns.
(48) At a distance along the axis Z of 50 microns, the beam diverges and has a diameter 2w (z=50 m) of about 11.8 microns, and at a longitudinal distance Z of 150 microns, the beam diameter 2w (z=150 m) is of about 26 microns. At a distance of 65 m, equal to twice the Rayleigh length, the beam diameter 2w (z=65 m) is of about 13.4 microns. In practice, if the two waveguides 6 and 21 have the same size, the loss is of 3 dB at a distance of twice the Rayleigh length.
(49) In an exemplary embodiment, the optical fiber has a mode diameter 2w.sub.0 between about 6 and 8 m. The polarizing waveguide 6 has a rather elliptic (and not circular) mode, having a great axis of about 8 microns of diameter and a small axis or about 4 microns of diameter.
(50) It is chosen an ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 of physical thickness T lower than the Rayleigh length arranged between the end of the optical fiber and the end of the waveguide polarizer 6. Hence, the Gaussian single-mode beam exiting from the optical fiber remains very little divergent between the end of the integrated waveguide polarizer 6 and the input of the optical fiber 30.
(51) This arrangement allows significantly reducing the spurious couplings out of the polarizing waveguide and reducing the propagation of the spurious beams in the substrate of the integrated waveguide polarizer. Moreover, the losses induced in the polarized and guided beam are reduced, in practice to less than 1 dB. In the direction of propagation, the core 31 of the fiber collects almost no light beam propagating in the substrate of the waveguide polarizer 6. This polarizing device also operates reciprocally in the reverse direction of propagation of the beams.
(52) This combination allows adding efficiently the polarization rejection ratio of the first polarizer 6 and of the second polarizer 52, without generating spurious interference beam.
(53) The longitudinal axis at the end of the waveguide section 31 is preferably aligned to the longitudinal axis of the waveguide polarizer 6. Advantageously, the defect of transverse alignment between the first waveguide end 8 of the first polarizer 6 and the second waveguide end 32 of said optical waveguide section 31 is lower than w.sub.0/2, and preferably lower than w.sub.0/10.
(54) The axial alignment of the thin-plate polarizer is not critical, when it is arranged on the source side.
(55) The ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 being preferably consisted of glass further has the advantage to be more resistant to a laser beam than an organic polarizer.
(56) On the contrary, with a thin film polarizer, which thickness is comprised between 0.15 and 0.5 mm, i.e. between 150 microns and 500 microns, the first waveguide polarizer 6 cannot be arranged in the Rayleigh zone of the optical fiber. In this case, the beam polarized by the thin film polarizer diverges: a part of this beam is transmitted in the waveguide polarizer and another part of this beam, of non-negligible power, may be transmitted via the substrate of the waveguide polarizer, which induces non-negligible losses, and possibly the appearance of a channelled spectrum. The use of a thin film polarizer of thickness higher than the Rayleigh length hence produces too important losses.
(57) A thin-plate polarizer, i.e. of thickness lower than the Rayleigh length, has a polarization rejection ratio limited in practice to about 20 dB to 35 dB, i.e. lower by several orders of magnitude than the polarization rejection ratio, about 40 dB, of a thin film polarizer, having a thickness of 150 to 500 m. Nevertheless, the juxtaposition of a thin-plate polarizer and a waveguide polarizer formed by proton exchange on a lithium niobate substrate allows reaching a measured polarization rejection ratio of 80 to 110 dB with very little losses.
(58) The positioning tolerance of the thin-plate polarizer is hence far lower in the longitudinal direction along the axis Z than in a cross direction. In cross direction, the dimensions of the thin-plate polarizer are far greater than the mode size.
(59) The polarizing device of the invention paradoxally selects a second polarizer that has an admittedly moderated polarization rejection ratio, but that has a thickness lower than the Rayleigh length, to allow arranging in series the first polarizer and the second polarizer in this Rayleigh zone at the output of the optical fiber 20.
(60) In a variant, the optical fiber 30 may be replaced by a first waveguide on an integrated optical circuit, having cross-dimensions similar to those of the second waveguide polarizer. In this case, the second ultra-thin polarizer 52 is arranged between the first waveguide polarizer and the first waveguide on an integrated optical circuit, so that the first and second polarizers are in the Rayleigh zone of the first waveguide on an integrated optical circuit.
(61) In a particular embodiment, the optical fiber 30 is a polarizing or polarization-maintaining fiber. In another variant, the optical fiber 30 is replaced by a polarizing waveguide.
(62) The first polarizer 6 is a waveguide polarizer on an integrated optical circuit, preferably formed on a lithium niobate substrate.
(63) Advantageously, the first waveguide polarizer 6 is integrated on the common branch of a Y-junction separator and the ultra-thin plate polarizer 52 is placed at the common input-output of the integrated optical circuit. The second polarizer 52 is bonded to the end of an optical fiber 12 that connects the output end of the interferometer to the source separator 6. The second thin-plate polarizer 52 is arranged between the end 32 of the optical fiber 30 and the end 8 of the first waveguide polarizer 6.
(64) In a first embodiment, the thin-plate polarizer 52 is aligned on the waveguide polarizer 6. In this case, the alignment of the polarization axes is not much critical, because it is estimated that an alignment defect of 5 degrees is liable to induce a limited loss of 1% in the detected signal.
(65) For a thin-plate polarizer having 20 dB of rejection ratio, the extinction ratio of the polarimetric device is maximum when the two axes of the polarizers are aligned relative to each other.
(66) As an alternative and/or as a complement, another ultra-thin plate polarizer may be arranged on the optical path in the Rayleigh zone at the input of the integrated optical circuit 6, the thickness of this other ultra-thin polarizer being also lower than the Rayleigh length.
(67) Hence, a beam is polarized successively by a thin-plate polarizer 53, the waveguide polarizer 6, then by another thin-plate polarizer 52.
(68) Advantageously, in a second embodiment illustrated in
(69) Let's suppose that a non-polarized optical beam propagates in the core 21 of the optical fiber 20. The thin-plate polarizer 53 transmits a TE polarization component towards the end 7 of the waveguide 6. The attenuation induced by the thin-plate polarizer 53 in the transmitted beam 12 is only of about 0.5 dB. On the other hand, the thin-plate polarizer 53 attenuates the TM polarization component by about 25 dB to 35 dB. A residual TM component 15a is liable to propagate in a non-guided manner in the substrate. At the other end 8 of the waveguide 6 is placed another thin-plate polarizer 52.
(70) The polarizing waveguide 6 transmits a beam TE polarized to the thin-plate polarizer 52. However, the thin-plate polarizer 52 also receives a residual component 15b of TM polarization, which has propagated by internal reflection on the lower face 4 of the substrate.
(71) The thin-plate polarizer 52 itself attenuates the residual component 15b of TM polarization by about 25 dB to 35 dB. In the same time, the thin-plate polarizer 52 induces a very low attenuation, of about 0.5 dB, in the TE polarized beam 12.
(72) Hence the core 31 of the optical fiber 30 collects a beam of TE polarization, with an excellent polarization rejection ratio and low losses in the transmitted signal.
(73) Indeed, the device 60 of
(74) In the case where the IOC includes several waveguides 6 arranged adjacent to each other, the output paths of the IOC are separated by less than a distance lower than the cross-dimension of a thin-plate polarizer, it is possible to use a single and same ultra-thin plate polarizer at the output of the IOC to cover the ends of several waveguides on a same integrated optical circuit. In an exemplary embodiment, the cross-dimension of a thin-plate polarizer is of 2 mm, which allows covering waveguide ends distant by less than 2 mm. It is to be noted that there exist thin-plate polarizers of dimension far higher than 2 mm.
(75) In a preferred embodiment, the optical fiber 20 and/or 30 is a standard single-mode optical fiber. In another embodiment, the optical fiber 20 and/or 30 is a polarization-maintaining optical fiber, which axes are preferably aligned to the axes of the waveguide polarizer 6 and/or of the at least one thin-plate polarizer 52, 53, respectively.