Paper
18 May 2001 Polarization compensation in silicon-on-insulator arrayed waveguide grating devices
Pavel Cheben, Andrew Bezinger, Andre Delage, Lynden Erickson, Siegfried Janz, Dan-Xia Xu
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
As the AWG size is reduced our experimental and theoretical work demonstrates that it becomes increasingly difficult to suppress higher order modes and birefringence using ridge dimension alone. In part, it simply becomes difficult to meet the required fabrication tolerances when the ridge dimension approaches the order of a micron. We show that a novel polarization compensator scheme similar to that previously reported for a grating based demultiplexer in InP and consisting of simple shallow etched regions in the combiner sections of an SOI AWG, can eliminate the polarization sensitivity of the device by reducing the initial polarization dispersion of 2.22 nm to 0.04 nm. By combining the polarization compensator with mode filtering using appropriate array waveguide curvature, the shape of the array waveguides is no longer constrained. This allows the size of an AWG device to be scaled down to very small dimensions (e.g. less than a millimeter) and also permits the use of simple fabrication techniques such as wet etching. Our results were obtained on AWG devices based on 1.5 micrometers thick Si-on-insulator waveguides with a typical waveguide array area of a few square millimeters.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Pavel Cheben, Andrew Bezinger, Andre Delage, Lynden Erickson, Siegfried Janz, and Dan-Xia Xu "Polarization compensation in silicon-on-insulator arrayed waveguide grating devices", Proc. SPIE 4293, Silicon-based and Hybrid Optoelectronics III, (18 May 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.426939
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Cited by 16 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Waveguides

Polarization

Etching

Demultiplexers

Silicon

Dispersion

Birefringence

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