A new compact optical circulator based on a photonic crystal made of a triangular lattice of air holes etched in a magneto-optical material that does not require an external DC magnetic field to keep its saturated magnetic state is presented. The design has a threefold rotational symmetry and it consists of three single-mode waveguides and one resonator supporting dipole resonances introduced in the photonic crystal structure. Computational simulations of the circulator demonstrate that, at the 1.55 µm wavelength, the insertion losses are about -1 dB, while the isolation and reflection levels are about -15 dB and -24 dB, respectively.
III-V materials with quantum wells or quantum dot active regions have proven to be relatively efficient devices for amplifying light. However, integration and scaling of many other functions are moving towards the development of ever more complex photonic integrated circuits (PICs). Assembling these devices into hybrid/heterogeneous PICs poses a challenge in terms of bandwidth and footprint. In this work, we propose a Particle Swarm Optimized methodology to generate non-intuitive structures that couple light vertically from a III-V platform to a silicon-on-insulator chip. By designing heuristically optimized III-V and silicon tapers, we can overcome the limitations of typical linearly-varying spot-size converters in terms of footprint, without sacrificing bandwidth. Furthermore, the optimization parameters are adjusted to fit the usual design rule constraints that are ready for mass production, namely UV-lithography limits.
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