Paper
23 January 2002 Photofabrication for microphotonics in glass
Kazuyoshi Itoh, Wataru Watanabe, Kazuhiro Yamada, Ken-ichi Hayashi, Junji Nishii
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Large-scale integration of compact photonic devices may be the key technology for the future information age. If optical-waveguide structures with small radius of curvatures are integrated inside a small glass tip along with active devices, a paradigm of microphotonics inside glass may become possible. We will review the fabrication techniques for the waveguides and photonic-band structures inside glass with the ultrashort laser pulses and present our recent results of fabrication experiments. The experimental studies include fabrication of birefringent waveguides, formation of small vacancies called voids, and drilling of a narrow but long hole from the rear side of a glass. We will show the birefringence properties of waveguides that are induced by the lienarly-polarized ultrashort laser pulses of approximately 100 fs duration. Birefringence of the waveguides depends on the polarization states of the fabrication beam. The experimental studies on the stabilities of a void during the fabrication process are also presented. We will show that the voids move during the fabrication process although the beam and sample are fixed. It will be shown that the void moves from pulse to pulse toward the upstream direction along the optical axis. We can currently drill a long hole of more than 200 microns with a diameter of several microns. We also present the results of numerical analysis of optical propagation through photonic structures that are based on the array of voids.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kazuyoshi Itoh, Wataru Watanabe, Kazuhiro Yamada, Ken-ichi Hayashi, and Junji Nishii "Photofabrication for microphotonics in glass", Proc. SPIE 4459, Photorefractive Fiber and Crystal Devices: Materials, Optical Properties, and Applications VII, and Optical Data Storage, (23 January 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.454044
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Glasses

Silica

Femtosecond phenomena

Ultrafast phenomena

Water

Laser drilling

Polarization

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