Low-loss, geometry-invariant optical waveguides with near-zero-index materials

Author:

Wang Danqing12ORCID,Dong Kaichen1ORCID,Li Jingang3ORCID,Grigoropoulos Costas3,Yao Jie1,Hong Jin4,Wu Junqiao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering , University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley , CA , 94720 , USA

2. Miller Institute, University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley , CA , 94720 , USA

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering , University of California, Berkeley , Berkeley , CA , 94720 , USA

4. Lightgration LLC , Saratoga , CA , 95070 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Optical materials with nearly zero refractive indices have driven emerging applications ranging from geometry-invariant optical tunneling, nonlinear optics, optical cloaking to thermal emission manipulation. In conventional dielectric photonic circuits, light scattering and back reflection at the waveguide bends and crossings leads to significant optical loss. Here we propose to use near-zero-index materials as a cladding layer for low-loss optical waveguides, where optical modes are tightly confined within the dielectric core region. Compared to conventional waveguides, the near-zero-index waveguides are superior in maintaining a high mode-filling factor for small device sizes close to the diffraction limit and reducing the crosstalk in between at a sub-wavelength separation. In addition, we found that light propagation is robust to waveguide bends in a small radius (∼µm) and geometry variation in the cross section. Hollow waveguides with near-zero-index cladding layers further support low-loss light propagation because materials absorption is minimized from the air core. Our work offers critical insights into future designs of low-loss and miniaturized photonic devices.

Funder

National Science Foundation

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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