Using a combination of the new tools of metamaterials and transformation
optics, engineers at Penn State University have developed designs for
miniaturized optical devices that can be used in chip-based optical
integrated circuits, the equivalent of the integrated electronic
circuits that make possible computers and cell phones.Controlling light on a microchip could, in the short term, improve
optical communications and allow sensing of any substance that interacts
with electromagnetic waves. In the medium term, optical integrated
circuits for infrared imaging systems are feasible. Further down the
road lies high-speed all-optical computing. The path forward requires
some twists on well-known equations, and the construction of structures
smaller than the wavelength of light.
Light bends naturally as it crosses from one material to another, a
phenomenon called refraction that can be seen in the way a stick seems
to bend in water. Illusions, such as mirages in the desert or the
shimmer of water on the road ahead on a hot day, are caused by a
difference in the refractive index of layers of warmer and cooler air.
The new field of transformation optics (TO) uses this light-bending
phenomenon in a rigorously mathematical way by applying the 150-year-old
Maxwell equations describing the propagation of light onto structures
known as metamaterials, artificial constructs with custom-designed
refractive indexes. The most famous applications of metamaterials are
cloaking devices and perfect lenses, but those are just the tip of the
optical iceberg.
In a paper in a new online journal, Light: Science and Applications,
published by Nature Publishing Group, Douglas Werner, professor of
electrical engineering, and his post-doc Qi Wu and Ph.D. student
Jeremiah Turpin present a unified theory for designing practical devices
on a single platform using transformation optics. "This field
(transformation optics) is in its early stages, so there are many
contributions to be made," Werner says. "Our big contribution is in
figuring out how to develop TO designs with the simplest material
parameters without impacting performance, and linking the devices
together to form an on-chip integrated photonic system."
Among their designs are light collimators, which take light from a
source and focus it into one or more tightly focused beams, waveguide
couplers, which connect different sized waveguides, TO splitters, which
divide power from an input waveguide to two or more output waveguides,
waveguide crossings, which routes light in compact spaces without loss
or crosstalk, and TO benders, which turn the light around corners
without loss. These devices are only five to ten microns in size, and
therefore many of them could fit on a centimeter-sized chip.
"It has been a joint effort to develop these transformation optics
tools and designs," Werner says. "Jeremy wrote the algorithms behind the
simulation tools. Qi is developing the designs to be simulated. In
order to get the best design for a targeted application, thousands of
simulations may have to be performed using powerful optimization
techniques developed in our group."
Transformation optics devices that perform diverse, simple functions
can be integrated together to build complex photonic systems for optical
communications, imaging, computing, and sensing, say the authors. The
current, non-TO approach is to design each device using different
methods and materials that may not be compatible on a single platform.
The Werner group's technique, on the other hand, employs graded index
metamaterial structures, such as patterned air holes or rods, on a
silicon-on-insulator platform that can be easily integrated into on-chip
photonic systems, providing broad bandwidth and low losses.
In order to keep their designs grounded in reality, the group works
closely with nanofabricators at Penn State's Nanofabrication Laboratory
who are themselves developing new approaches to implement the Werner
group's designs. All of the designs described in the paper can be
realistically built with current fab processes, says Werner. "It's like a
CAD tool," he explains, citing the computer-aided design tools used in
manufacturing. "We've developed customized transformation optics
simulation and optimization tools for designing optical devices. Beyond
that," he continues, "TO is flexible enough that it opens up the
possibility of creating all sorts of new devices that don't currently
exist."
source


Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Kids96
Posted in: 



0 komentar:
Post a Comment