AMPLIFYING CHARACTERISTICS OF Er3+/Yb3+ CODOPED SERIES-CASCADED DOUBLE-MICRORING RESONATORS

2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (20n21) ◽  
pp. 2471-2481
Author(s):  
YUHAI WANG ◽  
CHUNSHENG MA ◽  
XIN YAN ◽  
DAMING ZHANG

Formulas for the transfer function and the output power gain are presented for an Er 3+/ Yb 3+ codoped series-cascaded double microring resonator (MRR). Around the pumping wavelength of 974 nm and the central signal wavelength of 1530 nm, the effects of the pump power, signal power, Er 3+/ Yb 3+ dopant concentrations and amplitude coupling ratios on the signal output spectrum are analyzed. The computed results show that the device can possess both the filtering and amplifying functions for the signal light. In the case of the amplitude coupling ratio between the microring and the channel being 0.17, and that between two microrings being 0.012, the device can produce more than 10.13 dB signal power gain.

Photonics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 256
Author(s):  
Yue-Xin Yin ◽  
Xiao-Pei Zhang ◽  
Xiao-Jie Yin ◽  
Yue Li ◽  
Xin-Ru Xu ◽  
...  

A high-Q-factor tunable silica-based microring resonator (MRR) is demonstrated. To meet the critical-coupling condition, a Mach–Zehnder interferometer (MZI) as the tunable coupler was integrated with a racetrack resonator. Then, 40 mW electronic power was applied on the microheater on the arm of MZI, and a maximal notch depth of about 13.84 dB and a loaded Q factor of 4.47 × 106 were obtained. The proposed MRR shows great potential in practical application for optical communications and integrated optics.


1977 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 147-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Tippetts

Specially designed 3-terminal elements called flow-junctions (FJs) and ‘reverse flow diverters' (RFDs) are shown to have useful amplifying properties which are often unrecognised. These are described by relating the devices to ideal network elements using an indefinite circle diagram. The FJ is useful between two transformer-like states and at the mid-point of this range its utility is described by its impedance matrix. A circuit using an RFD is shown to give a large-signal power gain which compares favourably with an equivalent circuit using a vortex device.


2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 032302
Author(s):  
连乐 Lian Le ◽  
付杰 Fu Jie ◽  
杨超山 Yang Chaoshan ◽  
韩根亮 Han Genliang

2018 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Shahidinejad

AbstractA microring resonator (MRR) and an add/drop devices are presented to generate picosecond solitonic pulse and signal as multichannel localized wavelengths, applicable for WDM-based free space optics (FSO) communication. A Gaussian pulse is inputted to the first ring resonator of the proposed system. Because of the nonlinear Kerr effect, chaotic signals are created. The second MRR filters the generated signals and shape solitonic pulses, where the accurate FWHM of 20 ps with intensity of 2.45 W are obtained. The add/drop device is applied for tuning the solitonic pulses. Results indicate that a range of solitonic wavelengths from 1550 nm to 1600 nm are obtained, where FSR and FWHM are 144 pm and 5 pm, respectively. Finally, performance of the proposed MRR system is evaluated in terms of bit error rate (BER) and Q factor. In the analysis, the proposed solitonic pulse is compared to conventional counterparts. Using the proposed MRR system, BER and Q factor of WDM-based FSO are considerably improved.


Nanophotonics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 269-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kishore Padmaraju ◽  
Keren Bergman

AbstractSilicon microring resonators have been hailed for their potential use in next-generation optical interconnects. However, the functionality of silicon microring based devices suffer from susceptibility to thermal fluctuations that is often overlooked in their demonstrated results, but must be resolved for their future implementation in microelectronic applications. We survey the emerging efforts that have been put forth to resolve these thermal susceptibilities and provide a comprehensive discussion of their advantages and disadvantages.


F1000Research ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 251
Author(s):  
Siti Azlida Ibrahim ◽  
Amilia Mansoor ◽  
Tuan Ainin Sofea Tuan Mohd Marzuki ◽  
Nasr Y. M. Omar ◽  
Hairul Azhar Abdul Rashid

Background: One way to reduce the length of the gain medium in Erbium-Doped Fiber Amplifier (EDFA) is by doping the fiber core with a high concentration of Erbium. However, this method caused ion clustering effects, which limits the EDFA’s efficiency.  In this research, the use of Gallium as a new co-dopant in erbium-doped silica fiber is explored. Methods: The new fiber, namely Gallium co-doped Erbium fiber (Ga-EDF), is used as a gain medium in an optical fiber amplifier setup. A 2-meter length of the Ga-EDF fiber was used in a single pass configuration with a forward pumping scheme at 150 mW pump power. The Ga-EDF amplifier's gain and noise figure while pumping at 980 nm and 1480 nm were compared. The amplifier's performance was evaluated as the input signal power varied between -30 dBm to 3 dB, over the wavelength range of 1520 nm to 1580 nm. Results: The 980 nm-pumped Ga-EDF amplifier achieved the maximum small-signal gain of 22.45 dB and the corresponding noise figure of 5.71 dB at the input signal wavelength of 1535 nm. Meanwhile, the 1480 nm-pumped Ga-EDF amplifier attained the maximum small-signal gain of 20.83 dB and the corresponding noise figure of 5.09 dB at the input signal wavelength of 1550 nm. At the input signal power below -20 dBm and the wavelength range 1520 nm to 1547 nm, the Ga-EDF performs better when pumped at 980 nm. Their performance is comparable at the input signal wavelength range between 1547 nm to 1580 nm. At the input signal power above -20 dBm, the 1480 nm-pumped Ga-EDF outperformed the 980 nm-pumped amplifier. Conclusions: The overall performance indicates that the gain saturation point of the 1480 nm-pumped amplifier is higher than the 980 nm-pumped.


Micromachines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 954
Author(s):  
Anders Henriksson ◽  
Laura Kasper ◽  
Matthias Jäger ◽  
Peter Neubauer ◽  
Mario Birkholz

The combination of extreme miniaturization with a high sensitivity and the potential to be integrated in an array form on a chip has made silicon-based photonic microring resonators a very attractive research topic. As biosensors are approaching the nanoscale, analyte mass transfer and bonding kinetics have been ascribed as crucial factors that limit their performance. One solution may be a system that applies dielectrophoretic forces, in addition to microfluidics, to overcome the diffusion limits of conventional biosensors. Dielectrophoresis, which involves the migration of polarized dielectric particles in a non-uniform alternating electric field, has previously been successfully applied to achieve a 1000-fold improved detection efficiency in nanopore sensing and may significantly increase the sensitivity in microring resonator biosensing. In the current work, we designed microring resonators with integrated electrodes next to the sensor surface that may be used to explore the effect of dielectrophoresis. The chip design, including two different electrode configurations, electric field gradient simulations, and the fabrication process flow of a dielectrohoresis-enhanced microring resonator-based sensor, is presented in this paper. Finite element method (FEM) simulations calculated for both electrode configurations revealed ∇E2 values above 1017 V2m−3 around the sensing areas. This is comparable to electric field gradients previously reported for successful interactions with larger molecules, such as proteins and antibodies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ankur Saharia ◽  
Ashish Kumar Ghunawat ◽  
Manish Tiwari ◽  
Anton V. Bourdine ◽  
Vladimir A. Burdin ◽  
...  

AbstractAll-optical processor capable of processing optical bits has been a long-standing goal of photonics. In this paper, we report the results obtained by numerical simulations regarding the designing of an all-optical combinational circuit of an adder and subtractor circuits based on Si3N4 microring resonators. The designs of combinational circuit like adders and subtractor based on the use of all-optical basic logic gates are discussed while presenting the numerically simulated results. Extinction ratios of 5.2 dB, 3.5 dB and 2.7 dB are obtained for the half adder, full adder and half subtractor, respectively.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1565-1565 ◽  
Author(s):  
James T Kirk ◽  
Kerry W Lannert ◽  
Daniel M Ratner ◽  
Jill M Johnsen

Abstract Tens of millions of donor and patient samples are tested yearly to establish blood type compatibility between donor and recipient and to protect recipients from blood-borne infectious diseases. Blood type testing, particularly donor testing, is traditionally based in centralized clinical laboratories. However, current blood typing methods are encumbered by reagent availability, cost, technical training requirements, and time, placing a costly burden on the medical system. To address practical needs in blood typing, we have developed a multiplexed blood analysis platform using a low-cost and scalable silicon photonic biochip. This study investigates the use of silicon microring sensors to capture, detect, and quantify specific red blood cell (RBC) membrane antigens and anti-blood type antibodies from blood. To validate ABO blood phenotyping, microring resonators were streptavidin coated and functionalized with biotinylated anti-A IgM or biotinylated anti-B IgM antibodies. First, the response of anti-A/B functionalized microring resonators to characterized RBC membranes (RBC ghosts, 108 cells/ml) were measured in real-time (Figure 1). The biosensor arrays also exhibited minimal non-specific adsorption of RBC membrane fragments to the sensor surface. Microring resonators were shown to be suitable for identifying RBC ABO phenotype from donor blood samples. For ABO serologic analysis, silicon chips were functionalized with synthetic multivalent polymeric blood group antigens to serve as capture elements for circulating anti-ABO antibodies. Each chip also had sensors functionalized with biotinylated Protein A (btn-ProtA) and a biotinylated polyacrylamide polymer scaffold (btn-paa) to serve as on-chip positive and negative controls, respectively. The multiplexed biosensor chips were exposed to 100mL of plasma, followed by an anti-human-IgM antibody to enhance detection and quantification of antibodies bound to the surface. The resonance shift in each microring resonator was monitored over time, and the sensor response of the polymeric A and B blood group antigens was normalized to the control sensors. Figure 2 illustrates the levels of bound anti-A and anti-B for a panel of donor blood samples with varying ABO blood type, expressed as a relative shift in sensor resonance wavelength. These results demonstrate the detection of the ‘naturally occurring' anti-A/B IgM antibodies for each respective ABO blood type. We have demonstrated that microring resonator biosensor arrays can quantitatively determine the donor ABO phenotypic and serologic status while incorporating on-chip controls for process standardization. Our work serves as proof-of-concept that a multiplexed silicon nanophotonics platform can rapidly detect both RBC antigens and anti-RBC antibodies in biological samples. This method has the potential for broad applicability in hematology and transfusion medicine for blood typing, quantitative monitoring of specific antibodies, and pathogen screening. Figure 1 Figure 1. Figure 2 Figure 2. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 330-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. V Sarrigan ◽  
K. A Matori ◽  
I. S Amiri ◽  
H Ahmad ◽  
F Fadaeifard

In this research, we present the demonstration of GaAs–AlGaAs waveguide resonators. Two microring resonators (MRRs) have the same radius of 6.36 μm are coupled and used to generate dual-wavelength with terahertz (THz) spacing. We have shown that such resonators can be used to generate ultra-wide free spectral range (FSR) pulses with THz spacing, providing THz photonics communication signals. A Gaussian laser beam with power of 1 W is used as input. The MRRs are modeled by using GaAs–AlGaAs with GaAs core having refractive index of 3.368 surrounded by AlGaAs (n = 3.135). The drop port outputs of the MRRs system contains a dual-wavelength generated within 33 nm wavelength range, having a linewidth of 1.48 (185.320 GHz) and FSR of 3.95 nm (500 GHz) which varies slightly along the wavelength. Results were generated using the time-domain travelling wave (TDTW) method and capable of modeling both active and passive photonic circuits.


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