TY - GEN
T1 - Parametric design study for waveguide-based graphene mir photodetectors
AU - Wang, Dige
AU - Madden, Steve
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© COPYRIGHT SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - MIR sensing technology has the potential capacity to dramatically improve aspects of real-world problems-from planet formation to molecular species identification-once integrated "system on a chip" sensing devices are available at a palatable cost. A key limiter in achieving a full integrated on a chip design is the lack of broadband waveguide-based detectors, with no designs or experimental broadband devices having been demonstrated to date. Simulation and analysis conducted in this work has produced for the first time, practical graphene-based waveguide detector designs that can be made with existing and improved MIR waveguide technology. Using Rsoft FemSIM with high resolution graded gridding to accurately capture the effects in single layer graphene; extensive, and time consuming, parametrised simulations have been carried out for different waveguide designs to understand the design space available and optimise the absorption of light in graphene coated chalcogenide waveguides. The accuracy of the optical modelling and the values for the graphene material model were verified by modelling experimentally reported devices in the NIR region to ensure there is a close match to the measured points. Geometry (height, width), wavelength, waveguide type (Channel, Rib), Monolayer, bilayer and multilayer graphene layouts were the core variables investigated as functions of the waveguide core refractive index and top and bottom cladding indices. Fig. 1 give the examples of fully-etched waveguide design. Additionally, different materials as buffer/spacer layers to compress the field or to try and locate the graphene in a higher field region were also trialled. The results were contour graphs of absorption versus width and height for the fundamental mode at 10 different wavelengths with different Top/Bottom cladding index contrasts, from which it is possible to design wideband detectors.
AB - MIR sensing technology has the potential capacity to dramatically improve aspects of real-world problems-from planet formation to molecular species identification-once integrated "system on a chip" sensing devices are available at a palatable cost. A key limiter in achieving a full integrated on a chip design is the lack of broadband waveguide-based detectors, with no designs or experimental broadband devices having been demonstrated to date. Simulation and analysis conducted in this work has produced for the first time, practical graphene-based waveguide detector designs that can be made with existing and improved MIR waveguide technology. Using Rsoft FemSIM with high resolution graded gridding to accurately capture the effects in single layer graphene; extensive, and time consuming, parametrised simulations have been carried out for different waveguide designs to understand the design space available and optimise the absorption of light in graphene coated chalcogenide waveguides. The accuracy of the optical modelling and the values for the graphene material model were verified by modelling experimentally reported devices in the NIR region to ensure there is a close match to the measured points. Geometry (height, width), wavelength, waveguide type (Channel, Rib), Monolayer, bilayer and multilayer graphene layouts were the core variables investigated as functions of the waveguide core refractive index and top and bottom cladding indices. Fig. 1 give the examples of fully-etched waveguide design. Additionally, different materials as buffer/spacer layers to compress the field or to try and locate the graphene in a higher field region were also trialled. The results were contour graphs of absorption versus width and height for the fundamental mode at 10 different wavelengths with different Top/Bottom cladding index contrasts, from which it is possible to design wideband detectors.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85079692178&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1117/12.2541229
DO - 10.1117/12.2541229
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85079692178
T3 - Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
BT - AOS Australian Conference on Optical Fibre Technology, ACOFT 2019 and Australian Conference on Optics, Lasers, and Spectroscopy, ACOLS 2019
A2 - Mitchell, Arnan
A2 - Rubinsztein-Dunlop, Halina
PB - SPIE
T2 - AOS Australian Conference on Optical Fibre Technology, ACOFT 2019 and Australian Conference on Optics, Lasers, and Spectroscopy, ACOLS 2019
Y2 - 9 December 2019 through 12 December 2019
ER -