Crosstalk prohibition at the deep-subwavelength scale by epsilon-near-zero claddings

Author:

Ji Wenjie1,Luo Jie2ORCID,Chu Hongchen1,Zhou Xiaoxi3,Meng Xiangdong1,Peng Ruwen1ORCID,Wang Mu1,Lai Yun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Laboratory of Solid State Microstructures, School of Physics, and Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures , Nanjing University , Nanjing 210093 , China

2. School of Physical Science and Technology , Institute of Theoretical and Applied Physics, Soochow University , Suzhou 215006 , China

3. School of Optical and Electronic Information , Suzhou City University , Suzhou 215000 , China

Abstract

Abstract To prevent the crosstalk between adjacent waveguides in photonic integrated circuits, the minimum thickness of the cladding layers is around half a wavelength, which imposes a fundamental limitation to further integration and miniaturization of photonic circuits. Here, we reveal that epsilon-near-zero claddings, either isotropic or anisotropic, can break the above bottleneck by prohibiting the crosstalk for the modes with magnetic field polarized in the z direction at a deep-subwavelength thickness (e.g., λ 0/30, λ 0 is the free-space wavelength), therefore bestowing ultra-compact waveguide systems. The physical origin of this remarkable effect attributes to the divergent impedance of epsilon-near-zero materials far beyond those of dielectric or epsilon-negative claddings. Through full-wave simulations and microwave experiments, we have verified the effectiveness of the ultrathin epsilon-near-zero cladding in crosstalk prohibition. Our finding reveals the significant impact of impedance difference in waveguide designs and opens a promising route toward ultra-compact photonic chips.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

National Key R&D Program of China

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials,Biotechnology

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