Subwavelength-engineered metamaterial devices for integrated photonics
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Abstract
The engineering of subwavelength grating metamaterials has become an essential design strategy in silicon photonics.
The lithographic segmentation of integrated waveguides at the subwavelength scale enables the synthesis of on-chip
metamaterials and provides control over optical properties such as mode delocalization, wavelength dispersion, and
anisotropy. At the near-infrared wavelengths of the 1.55-μm telecom band, a range of subwavelength-based devices with
unprecedented performance has been demonstrated, including couplers, filters, and polarization-handling structures. In
this invited paper, we review the foundations of anisotropic subwavelength grating metamaterials and discuss our latest
advances in five new subwavelength-enhanced devices: a millimeter-long optical antenna that is evanescently coupled to
diffractive lateral segments, thereby achieving a record far-field beam width of 0.1º in silicon; a multi-line integrated
Bragg filter also using lateral loading segments, which produces 20 non-uniformly spaced spectral notches with a 3-dB
linewidth as low as 210 pm; a low-loss curved wavelength demultiplexer; a segmented multi-mode interference coupler
based on novel bricked subwavelength gratings, yielding a 1-dB bandwidth exceeding 140 nm; and a suspended
waveguide platform with low propagation loss at mid-infrared wavelengths.
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