Tuning of split-ladder cavity by its intrinsic nano-deformation.

Opt Express

Micro and Nano systems Initiative, Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore.

Published: December 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • A novel split-ladder photonic crystal cavity was designed to allow tuning by simply adjusting its gap width, differing from traditional coupled cavities that show more complex resonance behavior.
  • Simulations reveal that the cavity can achieve bipolar resonance tuning, exhibiting both red and blue shifts in its fundamental and second-order resonances, with a linear relationship to gap width changes.
  • Experiments using a comb drive actuator confirmed that increasing the cavity's gap leads to a measurable blue shift in resonance wavelength, achieving a 17 nm shift with a 26 nm gap increase while maintaining a high Q-factor.

Article Abstract

A wide-range split-ladder photonic crystal cavity which is tuned by changing its intrinsic gap width is designed and experimentally verified. Different from the coupled cavities that feature resonance splitting into symmetric and anti-symmetric modes, the single split-ladder cavity has only the symmetric modes of fundamental resonance and second-order resonance in its band gap. Finite-difference time-domain simulations demonstrate that bipolar resonance tuning (red shift and blue shift respectively) can be achieved by shrinking and expanding the cavity's gap, and that there is a linear relationship between the resonance shifts and changes in gap width. Simulations also show that the split-ladder cavity can possess a high Q-factor when the total number of air holes in the cavity is increased. Experimentally, comb drive actuator is used to control the extent of the cavity's gap and the variation of its displacements with applied voltage is calibrated with a scanning electron microscope. The measured wavelength of the second-order resonance shifts linearly towards blue with increase in gap width. The maximum blue shift is 17 nm, corresponding to a cavity gap increase of 26 nm with no obvious degradation of Q-factor.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.20.027697DOI Listing

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Tuning of split-ladder cavity by its intrinsic nano-deformation.

Opt Express

December 2012

Micro and Nano systems Initiative, Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore, Singapore.

Article Synopsis
  • A novel split-ladder photonic crystal cavity was designed to allow tuning by simply adjusting its gap width, differing from traditional coupled cavities that show more complex resonance behavior.
  • Simulations reveal that the cavity can achieve bipolar resonance tuning, exhibiting both red and blue shifts in its fundamental and second-order resonances, with a linear relationship to gap width changes.
  • Experiments using a comb drive actuator confirmed that increasing the cavity's gap leads to a measurable blue shift in resonance wavelength, achieving a 17 nm shift with a 26 nm gap increase while maintaining a high Q-factor.
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