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Analysis of light propagation in slotted resonator based systems via coupled-mode theory.

TLDR
This work investigates light propagation in a waveguide-resonator system where the resonators consist of slotted ring cavities via a frequency-domain spatial Coupled-Mode Theory (CMT) approach, and compares its results with a Discontinuous Galerkin Time-Domain (DGTD) solver that is equipped with curvilinear finite elements.
Abstract
Optical devices with a slot configuration offer the distinct feature of strong electric field confinement in a low refractive index region and are, therefore, of considerable interest in many applications. In this work we investigate light propagation in a waveguide-resonator system where the resonators consist of slotted ring cavities. Owing to the presence of curved material interfaces and the vastly different length scales associated with the sub-wavelength sized slots and the waveguide-resonator coupling regions on the one hand, and the spatial extent of the ring on the other hand, this prototypical system provides significant challenges to both direct numerical solvers and semi-analytical approaches. We address these difficulties by modeling the slot resonators via a frequency-domain spatial Coupled-Mode Theory (CMT) approach, and compare its results with a Discontinuous Galerkin Time-Domain (DGTD) solver that is equipped with curvilinear finite elements. In particular, the CMT model is built on the underlying physical properties of the slotted resonators, and turns out to be quite efficient for analyzing the device characteristics. We also discuss the advantages and limitations of the CMT approach by comparing the results with the numerically exact solutions obtained by the DGTD solver. Besides providing considerable physical insight, the CMT model thus forms a convenient basis for the efficient analysis of more complex systems with slotted resonators such as entire arrays of waveguide-coupled resonators and systems with strongly nonlinear optical properties.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Discontinuous Galerkin methods in nanophotonics

TL;DR: The underlying principles of the discontinuous Galerkin technique are described and its application to the simulation of complex nanophotonic structures and formulations for both time‐ and frequency‐domain solvers are provided.
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Efficient low-storage Runge-Kutta schemes with optimized stability regions

TL;DR: This work presents a numerical approach to generate new low-storage Runge-Kutta (LSRK) schemes with optimized stability regions for advection-dominated problems with significant performance improvements over previously known LSRK schemes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A perforated microring resonator for optical sensing applications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented numerical simulations of a refractive index sensor based on a perforated optical microring resonator and analyzed the sensor performance in two sensing schemes: bulk sensing and dielectric particle sensing.
Journal Article

Photonic structures based on slot waveguides for nanosensors: state of the art and future developments

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the state-of-the-art of bio-chemical nanosensors based on silicon photonics and discuss many sensing principles employed in optical detection, such as absorbance, reflectance, fluorescence, chemilumininescence, bioluminescence and refractive index measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Excitation of Confined Modes in Silicon Slotted Waveguides and Microring Resonators for Sensing Purposes

TL;DR: In this paper, the 3-D finite element method (FEM) is used to calculate the optical power transmission coefficients of all-pass configuration (slotted ring + bus waveguide) in wide spectral range, while the eigenfrequency spectrum of slotted rings and its dependence on the top cladding refractive index is analyzed by means of 2-D axisymmetric FEM approach.
References
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Book

Computational Electrodynamics: The Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method

Allen Taflove
TL;DR: This paper presents background history of space-grid time-domain techniques for Maxwell's equations scaling to very large problem sizes defense applications dual-use electromagnetics technology, and the proposed three-dimensional Yee algorithm for solving these equations.
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Meep: A flexible free-software package for electromagnetic simulations by the FDTD method

TL;DR: This paper describes Meep, a popular free implementation of the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method for simulating electromagnetism, and focuses on aspects of implementing a full-featured FDTD package that go beyond standard textbook descriptions of the algorithm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microring resonator channel dropping filters

TL;DR: In this article, a method of coupling of modes in time was proposed to simplify both the analysis and filter synthesis aspects of these devices, and the response of filters comprised of an arbitrarily large dumber of resonators may be written down by inspection, as a continued fraction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Guiding and confining light in void nanostructure.

TL;DR: It is shown that by use of a novel waveguide geometry the field can be confined in a 50-nm-wide low-index region with a normalized intensity of 20 microm(-2), approximately 20 times higher than what can be achieved in SiO2 with conventional rectangular waveguides.
Journal ArticleDOI

All-optical high-speed signal processing with silicon–organic hybrid slot waveguides

TL;DR: In this paper, a silicon-organic hybrid slot waveguide with a strong optical nonlinearity is demonstrated to perform ultrafast all-optical demultiplexing of high-bit-rate data streams.
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