Diamond, in single crystalline form and with its large palette of potential color centers, is a particularly attractive optical material for applications ranging from high-resolution magnetometry [
Photonics Research, Volume. 8, Issue 3, 318(2020)
All-optical tuning of a diamond micro-disk resonator on silicon
High-quality integrated diamond photonic devices have previously been demonstrated in applications from non-linear photonics to on-chip quantum optics. However, the small sample sizes of single crystal material available, and the difficulty in tuning its optical properties, are barriers to the scaling of these technologies. Both of these issues can be addressed by integrating micrometer-scale diamond devices onto host photonic integrated circuits using a highly accurate micro-assembly method. In this work a diamond micro-disk resonator is integrated with a standard single-mode silicon-on-insulator waveguide, exhibiting an average loaded
1. INTRODUCTION
Diamond, in single crystalline form and with its large palette of potential color centers, is a particularly attractive optical material for applications ranging from high-resolution magnetometry [
In this work we present a method for the integration of high-quality SCD devices with pre-fabricated photonic integrated circuits (PICs) on a second material platform, based on micro-assembly. By creating transferable, monolithic diamond devices, the limitation of the SCD substrate size is lifted, allowing a diamond on-demand hybrid optical system design. Furthermore, the diamond micro-resonators presented here are directly printed onto silica using an adhesiveless process. This produces a high thermal resistance interface between the diamond and its host silicon substrate, allowing for relatively high local temperatures to be supported in the diamond material. It is found that direct optical pumping of lossy resonant modes is sufficient to tune the material refractive index through the thermo-optic effect using milliwatt-level pump powers. A schematic of the integration scheme is shown in Fig.
Figure 1.Schematic of a hybrid integration scheme where diamond micro-disk resonators are fabricated separately from a host photonic integrated circuit chip. The fully fabricated diamond resonators are transferred onto the silicon photonic chip using a high-accuracy transfer printing method.
2. METHODS
A. Diamond Membrane Fabrication and Printing
The hybrid integration technique presented in this work is based on a micro-transfer printing method where diamond devices and their host PICs are fabricated separately and assembled using an accurate pick and place tool [
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Figure 2.(a) Schematic of a wedged diamond sample, (b) patterned devices illustrating device thickness selection using an iterative printing and thinning process. (c) Optical micrograph of an array of tessellated squares fabricated on a wedged single crystal diamond sample. The arrows show the axes of low and high material wedge gradient.
Fabrication of the thin-film SCD samples was carried out following our previous work using a lithography and inductively coupled plasma reactive ion etching (ICP-RIE) process [
To highlight the effect of the material wedge, and the possibility that desired membrane thickness can be selected from an array, a sample was patterned with an array of
Figure 3.Transfer printing process: (a) resist is spun and (b) patterned on a diamond membrane, (c) the pattern is transferred to the diamond using inductively coupled-plasma reactive ion etching. (d)–(f) A PDMS stamp is aligned with the diamond membrane device, brought into close contact, and retracted to release the membrane. (g)–(i) The membrane is aligned over a host substrate, brought into contact, and released, leaving it transferred on the new substrate.
Eight membranes from the tessellated square array were selected for printing. The first four were selected along the sample axis corresponding to the minimum wedge gradient,
Figure 4.(a) Two 45 deg tilted-view SEM micrographs showing eight membranes from the same original diamond sample, printed onto a silicon substrate. (b) Mean measured thickness for each of the eight membranes demonstrating the possibility of selecting membranes by their thickness, dependent on their original position on the sample.
B. Diamond Micro-Disk Integration
A particular benefit to using transfer printing to assemble micro-photonic devices is that the geometry is not limited to what can be realized in a single planar layer [
To fabricate the SCD micro-disks, the process detailed above for the tessellated square was followed. In this case, the e-beam pattern written into the HSQ resist was an array of micro-disks with a radius of 12.5 μm. The diamond was then etched using ICP-RIE [
The silicon bus waveguide was fabricated on a 220 nm thick silicon-on-insulator material platform, with a width of 500 nm. An upper cladding of HSQ was spin coated onto the chip with a thickness of 250 nm. The silicon waveguide was terminated with an inverse taper and embedded in an SU8 waveguide to allow off-chip coupling to the fiber with low loss.
The micro-disk dimensions allow multiple spatial modes in the cavity that will exhibit different propagation losses and coupling coefficients to the bus waveguide, which is a necessary component for the pump/probe optical cavity tuning presented here. Both the silicon waveguide and diamond micro-disk support TE and TM optical modes. For the upper cladding thickness of 250 nm, the achievable coupling coefficients for the TM mode set were closest to critical coupling and so the remainder of this work will focus on the TM modes. TE modes could be selected by using a different upper cladding thickness. Figure
Figure 5.(a) Power distributions of the first three TM whispering gallery modes of a diamond disk resonator with 1.8 μm thickness printed on a silica substrate. (b) Diamond disk mode overlap with the silicon waveguide as a function of lateral offset,
Figure 6.Optical microscope image showing a 12.5 μm radius diamond disk integrated with a silicon waveguide using micro-transfer printing.
C. Measurement Setup
The spectral characterizations of the micro-disk resonator and the optical tuning were both realized with the same measurement setup, as shown in Fig.
Figure 7.Optical measurement setup used for spectral characterization of the integrated micro-disk. The pump laser source, EDFA, and OSA are only used for the pump/probe thermal tuning measurements.
For the thermo-optic tuning measurements, the setup was augmented with a second laser source that was amplified using an erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) and multiplexed with the low-power tunable laser source through a
3. RESULTS
A. Micro-Disk Transmission Measurements
A transmission spectrum of the diamond micro-disk resonator coupled to the silicon bus waveguide is shown in Fig.
Figure 8.Normalized transmission spectrum of the hybrid diamond–silicon micro-disk resonator.
The large number of modes measured makes it difficult to identify a particular spatial mode solution. Nevertheless, each resonance can be fitted to an analytic model for an all-pass, whispering gallery resonator to extract values for the coupling coefficient, round-trip propagation loss, and loaded and intrinsic
Figure 9.(a) Measured transmission and fit to analytic all-pass resonator function for a mode around the average loaded
Figure 10.Power cross-coupling coefficients (squares) and distributed losses (circles) as a function of measured loaded
B. Thermo-Optic Tuning
The micro-assembly of diamond micro-disks onto the insulator provides a mechanism for optically tuning the device resonant wavelengths. Absorption of light results in thermal energy being deposited in the waveguiding material. The resultant increase in temperature induces a material refractive index shift based on the thermo-optic coefficient of index [
The effect of increasing optical injection power on the resonator refractive index can be measured using the well-known thermo-optic bistability in optical resonators [
Figure 11.Transmission spectra of the diamond resonator measured using a continuously swept laser source with on-chip source power as a parameter.
The propagation losses of the optical modes supported in the diamond micro-disk comprise of scattering and absorption components. A resonant mode with high round-trip propagation losses was selected to optically pump the device to maximize absorption and hence thermo-optic tuning of the cavity. The micro-disk can be addressed in a pump/probe setup to decouple the optical signal required for tuning the resonance position and the probe beam used to measure the effective device transmission spectrum. A resonance at a wavelength of 1563 nm, was selected for the pump, and simultaneous measurement of the effective transmission spectrum was taken using the probe beam. The effective resonant shift of the probe measurement is given as a function of the on-chip pump power in the tuning resonance in Fig.
Figure 12.Probe measured wavelength shift of a resonance centered at
Figure 13.Simulation of thermal diffusion in the hybrid diamond-on-silica-on-silicon stack showing high confinement in the printed diamond micro-disk. (a) Schematic of the material stack, (b) thermal simulation close to the micro-disk region.
4. CONCLUSION
In conclusion, micro-fabrication and transfer printing techniques have been developed that enable the heterogeneous integration of monolithic diamond optical devices with non-native substrates. A diamond micro-disk resonator was printed onto a silicon waveguide chip with high alignment precision and exhibiting loaded quality factors of the order of
Acknowledgment
Acknowledgment. The authors acknowledge the efforts of the staff of the James Watt Nanofabrication Centre at the University of Glasgow.
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Paul Hill, Charalambos Klitis, Benoit Guilhabert, Marc Sorel, Erdan Gu, Martin D. Dawson, Michael J. Strain, "All-optical tuning of a diamond micro-disk resonator on silicon," Photonics Res. 8, 318 (2020)
Category: Integrated Optics
Received: Jul. 12, 2019
Accepted: Dec. 26, 2019
Published Online: Feb. 14, 2020
The Author Email: Michael J. Strain (michael.strain@strath.ac.uk)