EP1073919A1 - Segmentierte komplexe streugitter - Google Patents

Segmentierte komplexe streugitter

Info

Publication number
EP1073919A1
EP1073919A1 EP99918461A EP99918461A EP1073919A1 EP 1073919 A1 EP1073919 A1 EP 1073919A1 EP 99918461 A EP99918461 A EP 99918461A EP 99918461 A EP99918461 A EP 99918461A EP 1073919 A1 EP1073919 A1 EP 1073919A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
grating
subgrating
subgratings
optical
segmented
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP99918461A
Other languages
English (en)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP1073919A4 (de
Inventor
Thomas Mossberg
Michael Munroe
Anders Grunnet-Jepson
Alan Johnson
Eric Maniloff
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Templex Technology Inc
Original Assignee
Templex Technology Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Templex Technology Inc filed Critical Templex Technology Inc
Publication of EP1073919A1 publication Critical patent/EP1073919A1/de
Publication of EP1073919A4 publication Critical patent/EP1073919A4/de
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/24Coupling light guides
    • G02B6/26Optical coupling means
    • G02B6/28Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals
    • G02B6/293Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means
    • G02B6/29304Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means operating by diffraction, e.g. grating
    • G02B6/29305Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means operating by diffraction, e.g. grating as bulk element, i.e. free space arrangement external to a light guide
    • G02B6/29311Diffractive element operating in transmission
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B5/00Optical elements other than lenses
    • G02B5/18Diffraction gratings
    • G02B5/1814Diffraction gratings structurally combined with one or more further optical elements, e.g. lenses, mirrors, prisms or other diffraction gratings
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J14/00Optical multiplex systems
    • H04J14/005Optical Code Multiplex
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/02Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating
    • G02B6/02057Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating comprising gratings
    • G02B6/02076Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings
    • G02B6/0208Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by their structure, wavelength response
    • G02B6/02085Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by their structure, wavelength response characterised by the grating profile, e.g. chirped, apodised, tilted, helical

Definitions

  • the invention relates to optical communication systems using segmented complex diffraction gratings.
  • WDM wavelength division multiplexing
  • OCDMA optical code division multiple access
  • U.S. patent 5, 1 82,31 8 and U.S. patent application 09/227,097 describe diffraction gratings having a complex profile that include multiple sinusoidal subgratings, each subgrating having a specific amplitude and spatial phase.
  • Such gratings can deflect optical pulses from a specific input direction to a specific output direction while simultaneously multiplying the Fourier spectrum of the input pulse by a predetermined filtering function.
  • the output signals are a cross-correlation between the input waveform and the grating encoded temporal waveform.
  • These gratings can accept input beams and generate spectrally filtered output beams propagating in one or more output directions.
  • the filtering function of the device is programmed by choice of grating profile. By suitable programming, multiple transfer functions may be realized, each having its own specific input and output direction.
  • optical apparatus such as, for example, a segmented grating
  • a segmented grating that apply a predetermined complex- valued spectral filtering function to an input optical field and produce a filtered version of the input field that propagates in an output direction.
  • Another aspect of the invention includes methods for making such optical apparatus.
  • Grating devices comprised of one or more such optical apparatus, can be used, for example, in OCDMA data links to temporally code optical signals with specific codes such that multiple coded channels simultaneously can be transmitted through the same link and then be decoded into separate channels at the output of the system.
  • the optical apparatus also can be used for programmable spectral filtering.
  • segmented gratings comprise a series of spatially distinct subgratings arrayed end to end. Each subgrating possesses a periodic array of diffraction structures (lines or more general elements).
  • the overall transfer function of such a segmented grating is determined by controlling (a) the spatial periodicity (spatial frequency) of each subgrating, (b) the amplitude of each subgrating, (c) the spacing between the last diffraction structure on each subgrating and the first diffraction structure of the successive subgrating, and (d) the optical path length and transparency through each subgrating, or each subgrating plus additional material layers utilized to control optical path length and transparency.
  • FIG. 1 A is a schematic diagram of a multiplexed communication system.
  • FIG. 1 B is a schematic diagram of an optical path of FIG. 1 A.
  • FIG. 2A is a plan view of a segmented grating.
  • FIG. 2B shows an elevational sectional view of the segmented grating of FIG.
  • FIG. 3A is a schematic diagram showing an input angle and an output angle for a light beam incident to the segmented grating of FIGS. 2A-2B.
  • FIG. 3B is a schematic diagram showing an angle between a plane containing an input light beam and an output beam and an x-axis wherein the angle is measured in an x-y plane.
  • FIG. 3C shows a temporally coded optical pulse having four time slices that is incident on a segmented grating having four contiguous, equal-width subgratings.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates a method for fabricating segmented gratings.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates another method for fabricating segmented gratings.
  • FIG. 6 illustrates another method for fabricating segmented gratings.
  • FIG. 7 is a sectional view of two subgratings of a segmented grating, the subgratings having different optical thicknesses.
  • FIG. 8 is a sectional view of two subgratings of a segmented grating, the subgratings having a saw-tooth shaped blaze.
  • FIG. 9 is a schematic diagram of a four-channel OCDMA system.
  • FIG. 1 A is a schematic diagram of an OCDMA communication system 9 that uses segmented diffraction gratings to perform optical multiplexing and demultiplexing.
  • a short-pulse laser 10 generates a coherent light beam 1 2.
  • a beam splitter 1 3 divides the light beam 1 2 into beams 15, 16.
  • the beams 1 5, 1 6 are modulated by respective modulators 1 5a, 1 6a, thereby generating respective modulated beams 1 5b, 1 6b.
  • the modulation of each of the beams 1 5a, 1 6a is done in response to external data streams, not shown in FIG. 1 A.
  • the beams 1 5b, 1 6b consist, either by virtue of the operative character of the laser source 10, the action of the modulators 1 5a, 1 6a, or a combination of the two, of a stream of bits whose temporal character matches the designed input pulses of a compound grating 19.
  • the compound grating 1 9 comprises two superimposed segmented gratings 19i5, 1 9 ⁇ e (not shown in FIG. 1 A) operative on the beams 1 5b, 1 6b, respectively, to produce separate output time codes in an optical transport 1 1 (such as, for example, an optical fiber) for each of the beams 1 5b, 16b. (The coding technique and the details of the compound grating 1 9 are described below) .
  • the combined coded beam is transported to a second compound grating 1 9a via the optical transport 1 1 .
  • the compound grating 19a also comprises two superimposed segmented gratings 1 9a ⁇ s, 19ai6 (not shown in FIG. 1 A) operative on the time codes in the beam received from the optical transport 1 1 to produce respective output beams 1 5c, 1 6c.
  • the beams 1 5c, 16c are modulated identically to the beams 1 5a, 1 6a, respectively. (The decoding technique and the compound grating 1 9a are described below) .
  • the beams 1 5c, 1 6c are detected by detectors 1 5d, 1 6d and converted into electrical signals that correspond to the signals that activated the modulators 1 5a, 16a.
  • two beams are combined (multiplexed) into one coded beam that propagates along an optical transport.
  • three, four, or more beams can be multiplexed into one beam.
  • the combined coded beam can be transmitted over a transmission system and then the beams can be demultiplexed.
  • FIG. 1 B illustrates the transmission of the beam 1 6b through the communication system 9 of FIG. 1 A.
  • the beam 1 6b is collimated by a lens 6a so that the beam 1 6b illuminates the entire operative width of the two-dimensional segmented grating 1 9 ⁇ e contained within the compound grating 1 9.
  • the compound grating 1 9 als ⁇ ncludes the segmented grating 1 9 ⁇ s.
  • the compound grating 1 9 comprises the segmented gratings 1 9 ⁇ s, 1 9 ⁇ that correspond to different surfaces of the compound grating 19.
  • such segmented gratings can be combined into a single layer on a single surface, the optical properties of the single layer determined by summing the optical properties of individual subgratings.
  • a second lens 6b focuses the beam 1 6b into the optical transport 1 1
  • Spatial filtering provided by a spatial filter 8a (or produced by entry into the optical transport 1 1 ) selects an operative angular output channel of the segmented grating 1 9 ⁇ e.
  • a lens 7a receives the beam 1 6b and illuminates the segmented grating 1 9a ⁇ e over its operative width and the beam 1 6c transmitted through the compound grating 1 9a is focused by a collimating lens 7b.
  • a spatial filter 8b following the lens 7b selects the operative output angular channel of the segmented grating 1 9a ⁇ e
  • the compound grating 1 9a also comprises the segmented gratings 19ai5 for the beam 1 5b (not shown in FIG. 1 B) and the segmented gratings 1 9ai ⁇ , 1 9ai ⁇ can be on different surfaces or superposed.
  • FIG 1 B illustrates only the path of the beam 1 6b but the path of the beam 1 5b can be similar.
  • the communication system 9 includes mechanisms for collimating each of the beams 1 5b, 1 6b, and providing for the beams to illuminate corresponding segmented gratings 1 9 ⁇ s and 1 9 ⁇ within compound grating 19 at a different angle
  • a separate lens, such as the lens 6a, for each input beam provides an exemplary mechanism for collimating beams and illuminating segmented gratings.
  • a single lens and control over the launch conditions of the input beams toward the single lens can be used
  • An example of spatial control comprises a spatial filter in the front focal plane of the single lens with apertures sufficiently small to provide diffractive grating filling.
  • the compound grating 19a there is a mechanism for providing a spatial Fourier decomposition of the angular output of the segmented gratings comprising compound grating 19a and appropriate spatial filtering mechanisms for selecting the multiple operative angular output channels, e.g., the lens 7b and the spatial filter 8b
  • a single lens provides an exemplary mechanism for providing spatial Fourier decomposition Apertures placed in the focal plane of the single lens then permit selection of operative angular channels
  • Other methods for selecting operative angular channels also can be used.
  • the compound gratings 1 9, 1 9a through their constituent segmented gratings 1 9i5, 1 9 ⁇ and 1 9a ⁇ s, 1 9a ⁇ e, respectively, are designed to accept light beams from one or more directions and to redirect the light beams into one or more output directions in a manner that is dependent on the temporal waveform of the light beams Considering a specific input direction and one of the output directions associated with this specific input direction, the grating's functions are summarized as follows. A portion of each spectral component of the input light beam is mapped into the output direction with a controlled amplitude and phase. The compound grating applies a designated complex valued spectral transfer function to the input light beam and produces a filtered version of the input light beam that propagates in the output direction.
  • the spectral resolution of the filtering function is determined by the physical size of the corresponding segmented grating and the input and output angles of the light beam relative to the grating.
  • the spectral mapping between each input direction and each output direction may be programmed substantially independently using dedicated segmented gratings for each mapping. Such mappings are described in U.S. patent 5, 182,394 which is incorporated herein by reference.
  • the spectral transfer functions are determined by respective segmented gratings.
  • FIG. 2A shows an example of a segmented grating 20 that is similar to the segmented gratings 1 9 ⁇ s, 1 9ai5, 1 9 ⁇ e, 19a ⁇ .
  • the compound gratings 1 9, 19a each contain two such segmented gratings, superimposed or summed together.
  • the design of a single segmented grating is described below and compound gratings incorporating two or more segmented gratings are designed through repetitive application of single segmented grating procedures.
  • each of the subgratings 20 have amplitude, phase, and period, all of which can be independently selected for each of the subgratings 20. (FIG. 2B shows only six at the subgratings 20. )
  • the structure of the subgratings 20. is defined mathematically with respect to coordinate axes 22 and angles descriptive of the segmented grating 20 and associated optical input and output directions. For convenience, the origin of the coordinate axes 22 is selected to be at a center 23 of the segmented grating 20.
  • the segmented grating surface is taken to coincide with the x-y plane.
  • an input line 31 passes through the coordinate center 23 and is parallel to an input direction and an output line 33 passes through the coordinate center 23 parallel to an output direction.
  • the input line 31 and the output line 33 define a plane, referred to herein as the input/output plane.
  • the z-axis is located in the input/output plane. In other embodiments, the z-axis is not in the input/output plane.
  • FIGS. 3A and 3B show an input angle ( ⁇ m) and an output angle ( ⁇ out) that are in the nput/output plane.
  • the angular separation between the input (output) direction and the z-axis is ⁇ .n ( ⁇ out), where the angles are positive as shown in FIG. 3A.
  • FIG. 3B shows an angle ⁇ a between the input/output plane and the x-axis as measured in the x- y plane.
  • FIGS. 3A and 3B show the geometrical arrangement of a segmented grating relative to particular input and output optical field directions.
  • a groove-normal line is defined as a line perpendicular to the grooves lying in the plane of the segmented grating surface and passing through the origin.
  • the groove-normal line is contained within the input/output plane and is parallel to the x-axis. In other embodiments, the groove-normal line can be at other locations relative to the input/output plane.
  • the diffractive structures that redirect and spectrally filter the input optical beam into the output direction are perpendicular to the input/output plane and are within or on the surface of the segmented grating 20.
  • Multiple segmented gratings having the same or different values of ⁇ a can be co-located on the same substrate with any degree of overlap.
  • Compound gratings may include a single segmented grating, multiple spatially superimposed segmented gratings, or a combination of spatially superimposed and spatially separated segmented gratings fabricated onto a single substrate.
  • the compound grating 20 uses transmissive segmented gratings, but reflective gratings can also be used. Each input optical beam illuminates the active width of each segmented grating structure with which it is intended to interact.
  • the compound grating 19 and the segmented gratings 1 9 ⁇ s, 19 ⁇ e are substantially planar and arranged parallel to the x-y coordinate plane.
  • segmented gratings may be implemented with nonplanar surface geometry.
  • a segmented grating could be supported by a nonplanar (e. g., a concave or convex) substrate.
  • the use of non-planar surface geometry allows for the control over the spatial wavefront of input optical beams in addition to the spectral content control that is afforded by grating segmentation.
  • a single segmented grating is fabricated in the form of a series of N spatially distinct subgratings arrayed side to side whose collective span defines the operative width of the segmented grating. If the input/ouput plane contains the x-axis, each subgrating possesses a periodic array of diffractive structures (for example, grooves) arranged in a plane perpendicular to the input/output plane. The spacing between diffractive structures within the N successive spatial subgratings is typically but not necessarily the same.
  • the N subgratings are written or otherwise created such that each occupies a specific subsection of a compound grating surface and subgratings appear successively as one passes along the groove-normal line.
  • the subgratings of a particular segmented grating typically (but not necessarily) have the same span perpendicular to the groove-normal line, i.e., height.
  • the spatial interval between the last diffractive structure (groove) of each subgrating and the first diffractive structure (groove) of the successive subgrating can be controlled as well, as described below. Control over groove positioning provides control over relative spatial phase of adjacent subgratings. Also controlled is the amplitude of the diffractive structures within a given subgrating. The manner in which subgrating spacing and amplitude is controlled determines the spectral transfer function of the grating.
  • the optical thickness of the various subgratings comprising a segmented grating can be controlled by variation of substrate thickness, addition of phase masks, or other means known in the art to provide additional control over the spectral transfer function of the grating. Variation of optical thickness under a spatial subgrating or the separation between subgratings both act to control the relative phase of light transferred from the input to the output directions. Active devices can be added between the subgratings to dynamically change subgrating-subgrating separation to allow for the dynamical reprogramming of the spectral filtering function. Active devices to control the optical thickness of subgratings inclusive of overlays can be added to provide an alternative means of dynamical reprogramming of the spectral filtering function.
  • the 2A-2B has eight subgratings 20.
  • the subgratings 20. have essentially equal extent along the groove normal line; however, subgratings of dissimilar extent can be employed.
  • the segmented grating 20 is a transmissive phase grating, but it could be a reflective, amplitude, or other generalized physical grating type. We represent the transmissive optical phase shift versus position of a subgrating 20.
  • h, ⁇ x A,f ⁇ 2 ⁇ x - x,)l ) + ⁇ , ⁇ for x, a ⁇ x' ⁇ x, b ⁇ , (1 )
  • X represents the spatial position coordinate along the groove-normal line
  • x> is the spatial position shift of the i th subgrating groove pattern
  • the function / represents a particular groove profile and is periodic with period 2 ⁇ and modulates between the values of 0 and 1
  • is an optical phase shift introduced by a variation in substrate thickness or superimposed phase mask
  • A is a real-valued amplitude factor
  • x. a and x. are the edge positions of subgrating /
  • is the spatial period of the i t subgrating.
  • h ⁇ (x'j 0.
  • the subscript / ranges from 1 to N and denotes individual subgratings.
  • the parameters A , ⁇ , x., and ⁇ . for the subgratings employed, a wide range of spectral filtering functions can be encoded.
  • the parameters A, , ⁇ , , x, , and ⁇ necessary to produce specific, predetermined spectral transfer functions are chosen in a variety of ways.
  • a segmented grating can be constructed to provide a predetermined spectral transfer function T(v) (where v is the optical frequency) as approximated by N transmission coefficients each of which corresponding to one of N contiguous frequency channels collectively 8
  • the segmented grating requires approximately N subgratings.
  • the subgratings require a spatial width of approximately c/[ ⁇ v(sin ⁇ m + sin ⁇ out )], where c is the vacuum speed of light.
  • the total width of the grating is given approximately by Nc/[ ⁇ v(sin ⁇ ⁇ n +sin ⁇ out )], assuming that the subgratings are contiguous.
  • the complete spatial width of the segmented grating for T(v) is approximately 3.4 cm.
  • the parameters (A, , ⁇ , , x, , and ⁇ ,) for all of the N subgratings comprising the segmented grating determine the spectral transfer function T(v) . Given the subgrating parameters, the spectral transfer function of the segmented grating can be determined. Conversely, given a predetermined spectral transfer function, the subgrating parameters necessary to create a corresponding segmented grating can be determined. It should be understood that, while the mathematics presented herein contain certain constraining assumptions in order to facilitate explanation, the equations can be generalized.
  • F(v) is the spatial Fourier transform of a subgrating
  • A. is equal to the amplitude of , .
  • the quantities x, and ⁇ . both determine the phase of ⁇ , as seen in the above equations.
  • An appropriate combination of ⁇ and ⁇ . consistent with Eq. (2b) and Eq. (3) can be chosen at the convenience of the grating designer.
  • the angles ⁇ m and ⁇ out are designer inputs as is T(v) .
  • a more general solution for obtaining the subgrating parameters is to calculate the continuous grating profile that will generate the desired continuous transfer function. If the transmissive phase of a grating as a function of x' is given by
  • the continuous transmissive phase profile h(x') generally consists of a carrier spatial modulation with a slowly varying amplitude and phase shift.
  • a representative average of the spatial phase shift over the physical extent of subgrating / is determined and the values of ⁇ , and X; are adjusted in a convenient combination to match the determined spatial phase shift determined from Eq. (4) .
  • the physical extent of subgrating i is determined and Ai is set equal to this grating amplitude.
  • the spatial period ⁇ is set equal to the carrier modulation period of h(x') as given by Eq. (4) .
  • a variation to the approach just given is to determine a spatial carrier, amplitude, and phase within the extent of each subgrating separately. This procedure allows for the variation of ⁇ from subgrating to subgrating.
  • the grating's spectral transfer function should be the complex conjugate of the spectrum of the reference optical waveform.
  • the function of optical cross correlation here means that the electric field emitted by the grating in the operative output direction represents the temporal cross correlation between (a) an input optical waveform incident on the grating along the operative input direction and (b) the specific reference optical waveform whose conjugated spectrum coincides with the grating's spectral transfer function.
  • a reference optical waveform such as an optical pulse whose time profile is represented as a sequence of M contiguous time slices within which the amplitude and phase of the optical field are constant.
  • FIG. 3C schematically illustrates a temporally coded optical pulse 40 of the form [C ⁇ exp(j ⁇ ' ⁇ ), C ⁇ expfj ⁇ ' ⁇ ), C3 ⁇ xp(j ⁇ ' 3), C4 ⁇ xp(j ⁇ ' 4)] incident to a segmented grating 42.
  • the segmented grating 42 When an optical waveform is incident on a grating such as the segmented grating 42, the segmented grating 42 spectrally filters the incident waveform as described by the grating spectral transfer function for the particular ⁇ i ⁇ and ⁇ out employed. If the segmented grating is to perform the function of cross-correlation against the reference optical waveform, the subgratings should have parameters that are the "time-reversed" complex conjugate of the reference optical waveform.
  • the diffraction efficiency of a grating segment depends upon the groove profile of the segmented grating.
  • the magnitude of the spectral transfer function and the constant C of Eq. (2e) depend on the diffraction efficiency.
  • the compound gratings 19, 1 9b employed in the communication system 9 of FIG. 1 A.
  • the compound gratings 1 9, 1 9a comprise two superimposed segmented gratings, 1 9i5, 1 9 ⁇ and 19ai5, 1 9a ⁇ e, respectively.
  • the compound grating 1 9 accepts uncoded data streams and launches time-coded data into a common channel.
  • the compound grating 19a accepts time- coded data and launches distinct time codes into distinct output directions while simultaneously stripping off time-coding.
  • the compound grating 1 9a functions through the process of cross-correlation.
  • the compound gratings 1 9, 1 9a each comprise two superimposed segmented gratings 19 ⁇ s, 1 9 ⁇ and 1 9ai5, 1 9a ⁇ e, respectively, and the net transmissive optical phase shift versus position is consequently the sum of the transmissive optical phase shift functions for the two segmented gratings.
  • the groove profile is a square (square-wave) groove profile with a fifty percent duty cycle.
  • the input-output plane contains the z-axis.
  • the compound gratings 1 9, 19a have eight subgratings, and each subgrating has a width of 1 mm; thus the total grating width is 8 mm.
  • the first and second segmented gratings have a common output direction. If the coded output bits from second segmented grating are to have the following form
  • the filtering bandwidth of the second segmented grating is ⁇ v ⁇ 1/ ⁇ p or 0.6 THz.
  • the multiplexed beams co-propagating in the optical transport 1 1 are demultiplexed by the compound grating 1 9a.
  • the demultiplexing compound grating 1 9a in FIGS. 1 A-1 B is identical in design to the compound grating 1 9.
  • the laser 10 of FIG. 1 A preferably has a maximum temporal pulse width (FWHM) of 1 ps (given by the minimum ⁇ P of the two segmented gratings) .
  • FWHM maximum temporal pulse width
  • lithography optical or electron beam
  • surface profiles can be written onto a substrate point by point to make segmented gratings, and compound gratings and segmented gratings with spatial phase shifts between the subgratings can be written directly onto a transmitting or reflecting surface. Control of subgrating amplitude is also possible using this technique.
  • holographic techniques can be used to successively or simultaneously record subgratings with controlled surface profile properties.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates a method of manufacturing segmented gratings (and compound gratings) by spatial repositioning of a grating substrate to produce subgratings with controlled spatial phase.
  • the angle between the two beams or the wavelength of the two beams used in standard holographic recording can be used to control the grating period ⁇ ..
  • Spatial phase shifts may be introduced between exposures by translating a grating substrate.
  • the N subgratings can be recorded, 1 3
  • a similar method of producing segmented gratings comprised of subgratings with spatial phase shifts uses single exposure holography with a phase-code mask having the appropriate subgrating phase shifts encoded in its optical thickness.
  • the mask is placed in one of the two interfering beams in close proximity to the substrate. If these beams are incident from opposite sides of the substrate, this phase-mask can be contacted directly onto the grating substrate.
  • FIG. 5 shows a holographic method for fabricating gratings with N subgratings with controlled spatial phase shifts.
  • This technique controls the phase-difference, ⁇ , between the two optical writing beams 51 , 53. Control of the intensities of the writing beams 51 , 53 permits control of subgrating amplitude as well.
  • the optical phase-difference determines the position of the interference pattern on the sample where the beams overlap, and their intensity controls the modulation amplitude of the interference pattern.
  • the subgratings are recorded by illuminating the whole sample region with the interference pattern, but using an aperture of width d so that only the region behind the aperture is exposed and recorded.
  • FIG. 6 illustrates a method of producing subgratings termed the "master phase mask" approach.
  • a single writing beam 61 is used in conjunction with a master phase mask diffraction grating 63.
  • the writing beam 61 incident to the master grating 63 is diffracted to yield one or more extra output beams, such as the beams 65, 67.
  • the writing beam 61 and the diffracted beams interfere, producing an interference pattern that can be used to record a near duplicate of the master grating.
  • FIG. 7 shows a two-segment grating wherein the subgratings are written 14
  • Variation in substrate thickness provides for control over the subgrating parameter ⁇ , .
  • can be controlled by any of the means known in the art for varying the optical path length of the subgrating substrates.
  • index-of-refraction changes between subgrating substrates provide for control over ⁇ , .
  • Lithography provides for changes in surface level (and hence substrate thickness) as well as groove profile.
  • Holographic, lithographic, or mechanical ruling methods can be implemented on a substrate that has been prepared to have specified optical thickness throughout the spatial region occupied by each subgrating. Control over optical thickness can be achieved by any of the means known in the art including but not limited to etching and thin-film coating.
  • for each subgrating can also be controlled through use of a separate phase mask placed over a constant thickness substrate.
  • a grating can also be made using a Fourier synthesis method by the superposition of multiple periodic gratings each of which spanning the entire width of the segmented grating.
  • the constituent periodic gratings have relative phases, amplitudes, and spatial periods that, when summed, result in the segmented grating profile of interest.
  • the constituent periodic gratings are the Fourier components of the desired grating profile. The more Fourier components used the more sharply defined the subgratings will be.
  • the gratings can be manufactured by holographic or lithographic methods. By exposing a photosensitive substrate with multiple holographic exposures, each of which writing a particular constituent periodic grating, the desired grating profile can be recorded. Lithographic means also provide for multipass writing wherein each pass is employed to write one constituent periodic grating.
  • the gratings may have an arbitrary modulation profile including a grating blaze such as a saw-tooth, square wave, sine wave, or other blaze to engineer the distribution of power into the diffraction orders.
  • FIG. 8 is a schematic of a grating similar to that shown in FIG. 2B, but With a saw-tooth modulation profile.
  • Dynamic gratings can also be provided.
  • the gratings are static.
  • the following describes an embodiment wherein the gratings can be dynamically reprogrammed with respect to their spectral filtering functions.
  • the spectral transfer function of the compound gratings (and segmented gratings) is determined by the parameters A, ⁇ , x> , and ⁇ . of its constituent subgratings.
  • any means known in the art that provides for dynamic control of one or more of these parameters will enable dynamic reprogramming of gratings.
  • a variety of construction methods allow for dynamic reconfiguration of gratings, for example, control of ⁇ and A through control of substrate or overlay index of refraction.
  • a grating created by the means described above may be overlaid with a material whose index of refraction can be controlled by any of the standard means known in the art including, for example, applied electric field, pressure, current, or optical irradiation. If the means of controlling the refractive index of the overlayer is applied to act differentially over spatial regions essentially coinciding with the subgratings comprising the grating, either ⁇ or A, can be controlled. To control alone, an overlayer may be applied to the side of the substrate opposite to the grooves. Variation in optical thickness in the overlayer induced by any means known in the art then allows one to vary ⁇ . If the overlayer is applied to the groove side of the grating (filling in the grooves), then both ⁇ and A can be controlled.
  • A may be controlled by changing the difference in refractive index between the grooves and the overlayer.
  • can be controlled by controlling the optical path length of the overlayer (as in the case when the overlayer is applied on the substrate side opposite the grooves) .
  • the ratio AA ⁇ /A ⁇ may be varied by adjusting the thickness of the overlayer.
  • ⁇ A (A ⁇ ) is the change in A ( ⁇ ) introduced by a given change in refractive index of the overlayer.
  • Control of A alone can be achieved by a variety of means including the addition of overlayers on both sides of the grating substrate and configuration of the overlayers so that the optical path difference introduced by index changes of the two layers cancels and thus so does the change in ⁇ .
  • the change in amplitude of the phase subgratings is sensitive to the index change of only one of the overlayers and does not cancel.
  • Pure A control can also be obtained by stacking two differentially controlled overlayers on the groove side of the grating. Again, the optical path difference on passing through both layers is constrained to be constant.
  • the complex ⁇ can also be controlled through control of substrate or overlay transmission.
  • a grating may be overlaid with a material whose optical intensity transmission can be controlled by any of the standard means known in the art including, for example, with a liquid-crystal amplitude modulator or an electro- absorptive material. If the means of controlling the transmission of the overlayer is applied to act differentially over spatial regions essentially coinciding with the subgratings comprising the segmented grating, the imaginary part of can be controlled. Changing ⁇ will effect a change in the transfer function T(v) as described in Eqs. ( 1 -4) .
  • two optical channels are multiplexed using OCDMA coding.
  • additional channels can be encoded, multiplexed, transmitted and then demultiplexed.
  • four channels 901 , 902, 903 and 904 are modulated by modulators 901 a- 904a, multiplexed by a compound grating 919, transmitted on a fiber 91 1 , demultiplexed by a compound grating 91 9a, and then detected by detectors 901 d- 904d.
  • the compound gratings 919, 91 9a comprise four superimposed segmented gratings of the type previously described.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Optical Communication System (AREA)
  • Diffracting Gratings Or Hologram Optical Elements (AREA)
  • Optical Integrated Circuits (AREA)
EP99918461A 1998-04-24 1999-04-23 Segmentierte komplexe streugitter Withdrawn EP1073919A4 (de)

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US8298998P 1998-04-24 1998-04-24
US82989P 1998-04-24
US11533198A 1998-07-14 1998-07-14
US115331 1998-07-14
PCT/US1999/007391 WO1999056159A1 (en) 1998-04-24 1999-04-23 Segmented complex diffraction gratings

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EP1119788A1 (de) * 1998-06-20 2001-08-01 Templex Technology Inc. Segmentierte komplexe fasergitter
EP1119788A4 (de) * 1998-06-20 2005-05-18 Templex Technology Inc Segmentierte komplexe fasergitter
CN110622059A (zh) * 2017-05-22 2019-12-27 三菱电机株式会社 光图案生成装置
CN110622059B (zh) * 2017-05-22 2021-12-10 三菱电机株式会社 光图案生成装置

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JP2002513166A (ja) 2002-05-08
EP1073919A4 (de) 2005-05-18

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