Nanophotonics (Sep 2022)

Digitized subwavelength surface structure on silicon platform for wavelength-/polarization-/charge-diverse optical vortex generation

  • Cao Xiaoping,
  • Zhou Nan,
  • Zheng Shuang,
  • Gao Shengqian,
  • Zhu Yuntao,
  • He Mingbo,
  • Cai Xinlun,
  • Wang Jian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2022-0395
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 20
pp. 4551 – 4564

Abstract

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Optical vortices carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) have recently attracted increasing interest for providing an additional degree of freedom for capacity scaling in optical communications. The optical vortex generator is an essential component to facilitate OAM-enabled optical communications. Traditional devices face challenges of limited compactness, narrow bandwidth, and first-order OAM modes. Here, using the direct-binary search (DBS) optimization algorithm, we design, fabricate, and demonstrate a digitized subwavelength surface structure on silicon platform for the generation of wavelength-/polarization-/charge-diverse optical vortices. It features an ultra-compact footprint (∼3.6 × 3.6 μm2) and ultra-wide bandwidth (1480–1630 nm), supporting two polarizations (x-pol., y-pol.) and high-order OAM modes (OAM+1, OAM−1, OAM+2, OAM−2) with high purity of larger than 84%. The mode crosstalk matrix is measured in the experiment with favorable performance. When generating x-pol. OAM+1, x-pol. OAM−1, y-pol. OAM+1, and y-pol. OAM−1 mode, the crosstalk of the worst case is less than −14 dB. When generating OAM+1, OAM−1, OAM+2, and OAM−2 mode, the crosstalk between any two OAM modes is less than −10 dB, and the lowest crosstalk is about −17 dB. In addition, we also show the possibility for generating much higher-order OAM modes (e.g. OAM+3, OAM−3, OAM+4, and OAM−4) with the digitized subwavelength surface structure. The wavelength-/polarization-/charge-diverse optical vortex generator enables the full access of multiple physical dimensions (wavelength, polarization, space) of lightwaves. The demonstrations may open up new perspectives for chip-scale solutions to multi-dimensional multiplexing optical communications.

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