Artículos de revistas
Design of a compact CMOS-compatible photonic antenna by topological optimization
Fecha
2018-02-05Registro en:
Optics Express, v. 26, n. 3, p. 2435-2442, 2018.
1094-4087
10.1364/OE.26.002435
2-s2.0-85041477471
2-s2.0-85041477471.pdf
Autor
Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP)
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
Photonic antennas are critical in applications such as spectroscopy, photovoltaics, optical communications, holography, and sensors. In most of those applications, metallic antennas have been employed due to their reduced sizes. Nevertheless, compact metallic antennas su er from high dissipative loss, wavelength-dependent radiation pattern, and they are di cult to integrate with CMOS technology. All-dielectric antennas have been proposed to overcome those disadvantages because, in contrast to metallic ones, they are CMOS-compatible, easier to integrate with typical silicon waveguides, and they generally present a broader wavelength range of operation. These advantages are achieved, however, at the expense of larger footprints that prevent dense integration and their use in massive phased arrays. In order to overcome this drawback, we employ topological optimization to design an all-dielectric compact antenna with vertical emission over a broad wavelength range. The fabricated device has a footprint of 1.78 µm × 1.78 µm and shows a shift in the direction of its main radiation lobe of only 4° over wavelengths ranging from 1470 nm to 1550 nm and a coupling e ciency bandwidth broader than 150 nm.