Title: Properties of radiating sources in omnidirectionally reflecting Bragg fibers
1Properties of radiating sources in
omnidirectionally reflecting Bragg fibers
- John D. Joannopoulos, Yoel Fink, Peter Bermel
- MIT
- Charles Tapalian, Paul A. Lane
- Draper Labs
2Omnidirectional Reflectors
- 1-D periodic photonic crystal
- Brewster angle outside light line of air leads to
reflection at - all angles, and
- all polarizations, for
- frequencies in omnidirectional band gap
Projected bandstructure for omnidirectional
reflector
3Omnidirectionally reflectingBragg fibers
- A cylindrically symmetric omnidirectional
reflector encloses a hollow region (Yeh Yariv,
1978) - Bandstructure like omnidirectional reflector plus
1D defect modes
4A drawn omniguide
figs courtesy Y. Fink et al., MIT
- Photonic crystal structural uniformity, adhesion,
physical durability through large temperature
excursions
5Uses for Bragg fibers
- Long-distance light propagation
- Core freedom
- Biological sensors
- Active materials
- High power applications
- Thermo-optical devices
- Compatible with photonic devices
- Improve coupling from fiber optics to photonic
crystals - Want sharp bends for miniaturization
6Biological sensing
- Put fluorescent molecules on optical fiber
- But thats inefficient!
- Optical fibers rely on total internal reflection
- However, fluorescent molecules radiate in a
pattern in which much of the light wont be
internally reflected.
7Biological sensing
- Simulation point source in silica fiber (n1.6)
with air cladding
8Biological sensing
- Lots of radiation from point source escapes
9Biological sensing
- Use omnidirectionally reflecting Bragg fibers
instead! - Mostly transparent at excitation frequency
- Highly reflective at fluorescent frequency
- Predict very high efficiencies can test
computationally
10Simulation Technique
- Finite difference time domain (Yee, 1966)
- Yee lattice which has different components at
different points - Leapfrog integration of Maxwells equations
Yee lattice for 3D Cartesian coordinates
11Simulated system
- Molecule at one point near end
- modeled by electric dipole
- Light is gathered at the other end
- 3 bilayers of tellurium (n4.6) / polystyrene
(n1.6)
period a
core diameter 4a
waveguide length 50a
12Results for source at center
- High transmission, low loss in TM01 mode
13Transmission spectrum
- Flux measured as a function of frequency by
- More than 100 transmission above cutoff
frequency - Purcell effect
- Physically reasonable
14Transmission spectrum
- Zoomed in near mode cutoff
- Peak enhancement is about a factor of 20
15Density of States
- Definition
- Calculation method (Gilat Raubenheimer, 1966)
- Calculate w and vg for each point on a lattice in
Brillouin zone - Calculate density of states with isofrequency
surface inside cell, defined by
16Density of states
- DOS for Bragg fiber is large even within
omnidirectionally-reflecting range - Need to avoid coupling to propagating modes in
high-dielectric medium
17Density of states
- Local density of states
- 1D Van Hove singularities ? high emission near
cutoff frequencies - Observed in time-domain simulations
18Transmission for sources at r1.2a
- Coupling to modes different as orientation
changes (TE vs. TM) - Strong transmission for all orientations
19Source along r at r1.2a
20Source along q at r1.2a
21Source along z at r1.2a
22Transmission for sources at r2a
- Only r-orientation couples strongly to
hollow-core modes - Other orientations couple to high index modes
- comes from overlap of evanescent modes of source
and propagating modes of cladding
23Source along r at r2a
24Source along q at r2a
25Source along z at r2a
26Transmission with low-index coating
- Low-index coating like moving source toward
center, except for minor corrections - Cutoff frequency shifted by factor of neff
- Dispersion increased by factor of neff
low-index coating
27Transmission with low-index coating
- Transmission just as high as for dipole in air at
same position - Mode frequency shifted by 1/neff
28Source along z at coating surface
29New detection technique
- Place fluorescent molecules away from waveguide
surface (using coating, if necessary) - Collection rate can be higher than total emission
in vacuum! - Implication much higher sensitivities
30Conclusions
- Omnidirectionally reflecting Bragg fibers can
capture light radiated by molecules much more
efficiently than fiber optics - Enhances emission in unique way associated with
1D periodicity - Dipole moment orientation affects efficiency
- Molecules on inner surface couple to cladding
modes until low-index coating is introduced - Can apply these results to create sensitive
chemical detection systems
31Future Directions
- Theoretical modelling of fluorescent emission
process - Observation of dynamics
- Exploration of parameter space
- Experimental testing of Purcell enhancement
32Active material model
- Optical pumping and lasing take place at two
separate frequencies - Must compete with non-radiative decay processes
33New detection technique
- Steps to create fluorescence
- Send in excitation frequency at w0.4
- Excite pulse at w0.19
- Can reproduce physics of energy transfer between
fields and atoms with semiclassical model
34(No Transcript)
35Photonic Crystals
- Dielectric media with periodicity in one or more
directions - Behave like semiconductors, but for photons
- Photonic bandgap ? reflections
- Defects ? localized states
Diamond lattice photonic bandstructure
36Materials choice
- Can achieve similar effects with different
materials - Easier to make titania/silica experimentally
- Faster to simulate higher-contrast
tellurium/polystyrene system - Losses decrease exponentially with layers
37Number of bilayers
- For all modes, losses decrease exponentially with
number of layers - Calculated for core of size 10a, material Te/PS
38Core size
- For TE01 mode, losses decrease as 1/R3
- For TM modes, losses decrease as 1/R
- Calculated for 4 bilayers of Te/PS