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Photonic-crystal slow-light enhancement of nonlinear phase sensitivity

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TLDR
In this article, slow group velocities of light, which are readily achievable in photonic-crystal systems, can dramatically increase the induced phase shifts caused by small changes in the index of refraction.
Abstract
We demonstrate how slow group velocities of light, which are readily achievable in photonic-crystal systems, can dramatically increase the induced phase shifts caused by small changes in the index of refraction. Such increased phase sensitivity may be used to decrease the sizes of many devices, including switches, routers, all-optical logical gates, wavelength converters, and others. At the same time a low group velocity greatly decreases the power requirements needed to operate these devices. We show how these advantages can be used to design switches smaller than 20 µm×200 µm in size by using readily available materials and at modest levels of power. With this approach, one could have ∼105 such devices on a surface that is 2 cm×2 cm, making it an important step towards large-scale all-optical integration.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Silicon optical modulators

TL;DR: The techniques that have, and will, be used to implement silicon optical modulators, as well as the outlook for these devices, and the candidate solutions of the future are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Slow light in photonic crystals

TL;DR: In this article, the background theory of slow light, as well as an overview of recent experimental demonstrations based on photonic-band engineering are reviewed, and practical issues related to real devices and their applications are also discussed.
Journal Article

Silicon photonics

TL;DR: The silicon chip has been the mainstay of the electronics industry for the last 40 years and has revolutionized the way the world operates as mentioned in this paper, however, any optical solution must be based on low-cost technologies if it is to be applied to the mass market.
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Nonlinear silicon photonics

TL;DR: In this article, a review of nonlinear effects in silicon and highlights the important applications and technological solutions in nonlinear silicon photonics is presented. But the authors do not discuss the nonlinearities in silicon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optomechanical Crystals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the design and experimental realization of strongly coupled optical and mechanical modes in a planar, periodic nanostructure on a silicon chip, where 200-Terahertz photons are co-localized with mechanical modes of Gigahertz frequency and 100-femtogram mass.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibited Spontaneous Emission in Solid-State Physics and Electronics

TL;DR: If a three-dimensionally periodic dielectric structure has an electromagnetic band gap which overlaps the electronic band edge, then spontaneous emission can be rigorously forbidden.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

A perfectly matched layer for the absorption of electromagnetic waves

TL;DR: Numerical experiments and numerical comparisons show that the PML technique works better than the others in all cases; using it allows to obtain a higher accuracy in some problems and a release of computational requirements in some others.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strong localization of photons in certain disordered dielectric superlattices

TL;DR: A new mechanism for strong Anderson localization of photons in carefully prepared disordered dielectric superlattices with an everywhere real positive dielectrics constant is described.
Book

Photonic Crystals: Molding the Flow of Light

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed the theoretical tools of photonics using principles of linear algebra and symmetry, emphasizing analogies with traditional solid-state physics and quantum theory, and investigated the unique phenomena that take place within photonic crystals at defect sites and surfaces, from one to three dimensions.
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