Photonics Research, Volume. 3, Issue 6, 317(2015)
Quasi-vertical tapers for polymer-waveguide-based interboard optical interconnects
Fig. 1. (a) Schematic of an optical backplane. (b) Schematic of a taper-waveguide system for coupling between standard SMFs and single-mode waveguides. In this diagram, the top cladding is transparent in order to clearly show the system structure, the mode propagating inside the quasi-vertical taper, and the polymer rib waveguide.
Fig. 2. Mode profile distributions of quasi-TM mode inside the taper at (a) the fiber facet (rib width 8.5 μm, rib height 8 μm), and (b) the device end (rib width 8.5 μm, rib height 0.5 μm). The fundamental (left) and second-order (right) quasi-TM modes (see
Fig. 3. Mode profile distributions of quasi-TE mode inside the taper at (a) the fiber facet (rib width 8.5 μm, rib height 8 μm), and (b) the device end (rib width 8.5 μm, rib height 0.5 μm). The fundamental (left) and second-order (right) quasi-TE modes (see
Fig. 4. Coupling efficiency of (a) quasi-TM and (b) quasi-TE mode from a standard SMF into the taper at the fiber facet versus the rib height and rib width of the taper. The white demarcation curve indicates the cut-off region. The bottom left region under the white curve and upper right region above the white curve indicates the single-mode and multimode region, respectively. The intersection point of two white lines indicates the chosen rib height of 8 μm and width of 8.5 μm for the quasi-vertical taper at the fiber facet.
Fig. 5. (a) Fundamental and (b) second-order quasi-TM modes propagating through the taper into the polymer waveguide. The electric fields are normalized to the maximum electric field of the taper at fiber facet (
Fig. 6. (a) Fundamental and (b) second-order quasi-TE modes propagating through the taper into the polymer waveguide. The electric fields are normalized to the maximum electric field of the taper at fiber facet (
Fig. 7. (a) Calculated optical coupling efficiency of quasi-TM mode from a standard SMF (MFD 10.4 μm) into a polymer waveguide through a quasi-vertical taper versus the misalignment in
Fig. 8. (a) Calculated optical coupling efficiency of quasi-TE mode from a standard SMF (MFD 10.4 μm) into a polymer waveguide through a quasi-vertical taper versus the misalignment in
Fig. 9. Fabrication process flow for the quasi-vertical taper. (a) Spin-coat the bottom cladding material (UV15LV) and waveguide slab layer material (SU8 2002) on the substrate. (b) Spin-coat the waveguide rib layer material (SU8 2000.5) and perform the first photolithography step to form the rib core layer of the SU8 polymer waveguide. (c) Spin-coat the top layer material of the quasi-vertical taper (SU8 2007) and perform the second photolithography step to form the triangular region of a taper. (d) Spin-coat the top cladding material (UFC170A).
Fig. 10. (a) Top-view SEM image of a fabricated quasi-vertical taper. (b) Cross-section SEM images of a fabricated quasi-vertical taper at fiber facet. Inset in (a) is a zoomed view at the tip.
Fig. 11. (a) Schematic and (b) experimental setup to measure the propagation loss of a polymer waveguide. Inset at the top right corner of (b) shows the magnified view of the aligned fibers and the polymer waveguide with quasi-vertical taper.
Fig. 12. Measured coupling losses versus the wavelength. The measured coupling losses per taper are
Fig. 13. (a) Measured increase in coupling loss of both quasi-TM and quasi-TE modes between the standard SMF (MFD 10.4 μm) and quasi-vertical taper versus horizontal (
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Zeyu Pan, Harish Subbaraman, Yi Zou, Xiaochuan Xu, Xingyu Zhang, Cheng Zhang, Qiaochu Li, L. Jay Guo, Ray T. Chen, "Quasi-vertical tapers for polymer-waveguide-based interboard optical interconnects," Photonics Res. 3, 317 (2015)
Received: Jun. 24, 2015
Accepted: Aug. 18, 2015
Published Online: Jan. 6, 2016
The Author Email: Ray T. Chen (chenrt@austin.utexas.edu)