Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical UCSD Photonics Beamscanning ...

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11/1/2007 PHOTONIC SYSTEMS INTEGRATION LABORATORY UCSD JACOBS SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING UCSD Photonics 1 Photo: Kevin Walsh, OLR Photonics Systems Integration Lab University of California San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering Photonics Systems Integration Lab University of California San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical Beamscanning by Wavelength Switching Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical Beamscanning by Wavelength Switching T. K. Chan, E. Myslivets, J. E. Ford T. K. Chan, E. Myslivets, J. E. Ford

Transcript of Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical UCSD Photonics Beamscanning ...

Page 1: Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical UCSD Photonics Beamscanning ...

11/1/2007 PHOTONIC SYSTEMS INTEGRATION LABORATORY – UCSD JACOBS SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING

UCSD Photonics

1Photo: Kevin Walsh, OLR

Photonics Systems Integration Lab

University of California San DiegoJacobs School of Engineering

Photonics Systems Integration Lab

University of California San DiegoJacobs School of Engineering

Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical Beamscanning by Wavelength Switching

Fast, Two-Dimensional Optical Beamscanning by Wavelength Switching

T. K. Chan, E. Myslivets, J. E. FordT. K. Chan, E. Myslivets, J. E. Ford

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Flat mirrors

Deformable MEMS mirror

• Free Space Optical Communications:

• Dynamic connections: platform and environment– Require fast, active alignment and tracking

• Retro-reflecting modulators Single sided alignmentMEMS (Chan et al, J. Light. Tech, 24(1), 2006)MQW (Rabinovich et al. CLEO 2003, 2003)

• Scanning/Tracking Challenges:– Fast (<<1 ms switching)– Accurate and repeatable– Wide angle range ± 5°, (± 60° ideally)– Physically small & robust

Introduction

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Existing Scanning Technologies

Bulk, power, reliability~10mm~ 30°KHzGalvanometric

Drive current, angle range~10mm~ 1°MHzElectro-optic

Speed, environmental constraints>100mm~ 60°100 HzLiquid Crystals

Angle range~10mm~ 1°KHz Acousto-optic

Aperture, power handling~1mm~ 5°KHzMEMS mirror

Key limitationAperture RangeSpeed

Aperture Accuracy

Field of View

Speedtradeoff

Question: How to decouple fast response from other performance parameters?

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Diffract wavelength to angle: Decouples aperture from speed

Wavelength ScanningFast λ-tuning Laser source

Fixed collimator and diffraction grating

Vertical angleRandom-access scan

δθx

Far-field distribution

Θy

δθy

H=kλ

How fast?• Grating-assisted codirectionalcoupler with rear sampled reflector (GCSR) lasers

Simsarian, J. E. et al, IEEE Phot. Tech. Let. 15 (8) p1038, 2003.– < 50 ns switching times in– 40 nm scanning range– > 1.5 dBm per channel

• What about 2D scanning?

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Concept: 2D Wavelength Scanning

- 2 5

- 2 0

- 1 5

- 1 0

- 5

0

1 5 2 0 1 5 3 0 1 5 4 0 1 5 5 0 1 5 6 0 1 5 7 0 1 5 8 0 1 5 9 0 1 6 0 0

W a v e le n g t h ( n m )

Inse

rtio

n Lo

ss (d

B)

FSR = 7.7 nm(0.998 THz)

Diffraction order m:198 197 196 195 194 193 192 191 190 189

Channel 1

Channels 2 - 8

FSR = 8.5 nm(0.998 THz)

Wavelength (nm)

High-order gratingArrayed waveguide grating (AWG)VIPA free space echelon grating

Low-order gratingBlazed reflection gratingHolographic transmission grating

λ1,1

λ1,2

λ2,3

λ2,4

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2D Integrated Optics Demux

• Hybrid wavelength demultiplexerT. K. Chan et al, J. Light. Tech. 25(3) 2007– Combines a 1x40 channel AWG and a free space grating demultiplexer

Fourier-Transform Lens focal length = f

Blazed Gratingline spacing = d

AWG Demultiplexer

Demultiplexed plane(optoelectronic / MEMS device)

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2-D Single mode fiber demux

• 1x40 AWG + 50 lines/mm grating• 600 nm wavelength range• 7-15 dB insertion loss into SMF• 0.1 dB power penalty @ 10 Gb/s

Grating

Lens

40 AWG

Outputs

1x40 input array

Outputfiber

1092 channels (39 x 28 grid)

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2D Beamscanner

JDSU 1x8AWGTunable Source

Grating3rd order

300 lp/mm

Mirror

8x Microscope Objectivef = 25 mm

Lensf = 100 mm

V-groove array635 um pitch

Source Options:• Tunable Laser• Broadband noise source

+ Tunable Filter

Focal length determines angular range

Modifications:(1) Substitute JSDU 1x8 AWG to increase # of diff. orders(2) Increased grating frequency to cover a greater angle range(3) Add a mirror and short focal length objective for beamscanning

NA determines aperture

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2D Beamscanning Demonstration

Tunable laser1535 – 1590 nm

sweep

AWG V-Groove fiber array

Microscopeobjective Free-space

reflection grating

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2D Beamscanner Demonstration

Angular Output (degrees)

Ang

ular

Out

put (

degr

ees)

-8

-4

0

4

8

-8 -4 0 4 8

11.0 °

10.3 °

1545.0 nm 1586.4 nm

1547.0 nm 1588.3 nm

Calculated Directions

C-Band ASE illumination

Gaussian Output Beam ProfileCoherent illumination

1/e2 diameter6 mm

Numerical aperture = 0.12 Lens focal length = 25 mm

1/e2 diameter = 6 mm

For a telephoto lens Lens focal length = 100 mm1/e2 diameter = 24 mm

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Fast tuning

“Microelectromechanical tuneable filters with 0.47 nm linewidth and 70 nm tuning range,” Tayebati, et al, Electronics Letters 34(1) 1998.

• 80 nm span tunable etalon filter• ~100 µs sweep times• Channel bandwidth = 0.47nm res

Coretek/Nortel MEMS Tunable Filter

JDSU 1x8AWG

Grating3rd order

300 lp/mm

Mirror

8x Microscope Objectivef = 25 mm

Lensf = 100 mm

V-groove array635 um pitch

OpticalAmplifier

CoreTek TunableFilter

ASE Source

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Fast Sweeping w/ Tunable Filter

• AWG channel pitch = 50 GHz

• Narrow bandwidth source is desired.

• higher dispersive device more diffraction orders over the same bandwidth!

1546.7 nm

1578.2 nm183 µs

switching time

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

1531 1532 1533 1534

Wavelength (nm)

Inse

rtio

n Lo

ss (d

B) Filter Passband

AWG channels

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Virtually Imaged Phased Array: VIPA

r = 95%

VIPA echelle grating conceptM. Shirasaki, Fujitsu Sci. Tech. J., 35(1), 1999.

• Virtual line sources are created by multiple reflections• Large spatial offset between source origins create high-order echelle grating• Free-space optics equivalent to planar arrayed waveguide grating

r = 100%

2D Dispersion using a VIPAS. Xiao and A. M. Weiner, Optics Express 12 (13), p.2895-2902, 2004Multi-order VIPA + free space grating 41 Channels (~4x10)

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Future directions: Planar integration

Tunable Source

VIPA design parameters- 100 µm slab with n = 1.5, 2.5° tilt

Transmission grating: 500 lp/mm

Scan Output: • Scan area = 5.4° x 8.1°• Wavelength Range = 1400 – 1600 nm• Number of Rows = 26

Caution: tight alignment tolerances required

VIPA

High-resolution 2-D scanning possible

Grating

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Conclusion

• 2D beamscanning can be achieved by combining 2 dispersive elements orthogonally

– Direction is wavelength dependant via raster scanning– Speed is determined by wavelength tuning source, not the optical deflectors

• Combined an AWG with a free-space grating– Demonstrated 183 µs switching using off the shelf parts– Discrete 6x8 directional array– 11.0° by 10.3° direction range

• More desirable to combine a VIPA with a free-space grating– Continuous scanning in one direction– Very dispersive (more diffraction orders over the wavelength range)

• Wavelength tuning determines sweep speeds– ~10s ns wavelength sweeps are commercially available