Optimizing performance for an on-chip stimulated Brillouin scattering-based isolator

Author:

Lai Choon Kong1ORCID,Merklein Moritz1,Casas-Bedoya Alvaro1,Liu Yang2ORCID,Madden Stephen J.3,Poulton Christopher G.4ORCID,Steel Michael J.5ORCID,Eggleton Benjamin J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney

2. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL)

3. Australian National University

4. University of Technology Sydney (UTS)

5. Macquarie University

Abstract

Non-reciprocal optical components such as isolators and circulators are crucial for preventing catastrophic backreflection and controlling optical cross talk in photonic systems. While non-reciprocal devices based on Brillouin intermodal transitions have been experimentally demonstrated in chip-scale platforms, harnessing such interactions has required a suspended waveguide structure, which is challenging to fabricate and is potentially less robust than a non-suspended structure, thereby limiting the design flexibility. In this paper, we numerically investigate the performance of a Brillouin-based isolation scheme in which a dual-pump-driven optoacoustic interaction is used to excite confined acoustic waves in a traditional ridge waveguide. We find that acoustic confinement, and therefore the amount of Brillouin-driven mode conversion, can be enhanced by selecting an appropriate optical mode pair and waveguide geometry of two arsenic-based chalcogenide platforms. Further, we optimize the isolator design in its entirety, including the input couplers, mode filters, the Brillouin-active waveguide as well as the device fabrication tolerances. We predict such a device can achieve 30 dB isolation over a 38 nm bandwidth when 500 mW pump power is used; in the presence of a ± 10 n m fabrication-induced width error, such isolation can be maintained over a 5–10 nm bandwidth.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group

Subject

Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics

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