Publication | Closed Access
Polymeric Electro-optic Modulators: From Chromophore Design to Integration with Semiconductor Very Large Scale Integration Electronics and Silica Fiber Optics
191
Citations
38
References
1998
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringAcentric OrderOptoelectronic DevicesFiber OpticsIntegrated CircuitsMicro-optical ComponentElectronic DevicesOptical PropertiesPolymeric Electro-optic ModulatorsBuried ChannelGuided-wave OpticOptical SwitchingPhotonic Integrated CircuitPolymer ChemistryPhotonicsElectrical EngineeringPhotonic MaterialsPhotonic DeviceElectro-optics DeviceChromophore DesignChromophore OrientationsPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsOptical WaveguidesSilica Fiber OpticsOptoelectronicsOptical Devices
Chromophores with optimized second-order optical nonlinearity to optical loss ratios are synthesized, poled with an electrical field, and coupled into hardened polymer matrixes. Acentric order, which is necessary for electro-optic activity, is optimized by the consideration of chromophore−chromophore electrostatic interactions as well as chromophore−poling field interactions and thermal collisions which randomize chromophore orientations with respect to the applied field direction. Reactive ion etching and/or multicolor photolithography are used to fabricate buried channel waveguide structures out of the resulting polymeric electro-optic materials and to integrate polymeric waveguides with silica optical fibers. Tapered transitions are developed to minimize coupling (insertion) loss. Both vertical and horizontal integration of polymeric electro-optic modulator circuitry with semiconductor very large scale integration circuitry is demonstrated. Modulation to 113 GHz is demonstrated. Polymeric modulators are relevant to cable television, phased-array radar, ultrafast analogue-to-digital conversion, high-speed optical switching in local area networks, optical beam steering, optical backplane interconnects for parallel processors, and voltage sensing.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1