For two-dimensional photonic crystals involving infinitely long dielectric rods or air-holes on square or triangular lattices, a number of high performance 60° and 90° waveguide bends are obtained by solving optimization problems involving the radii of a few rods or air-holes as the degrees of freedom. In particular, the proposed 60° bends significantly outperform previous designs that insert three or five identical air-holes in the bend. The optimization problems are solved using a recently developed method based on the so-called Dirichlet-to-Neumann (DtN) maps of the unit cells. 相似文献
The on‐chip integration of quantum light sources has enabled the realization of complex quantum photonic circuits. However, for the practical implementation of such circuits in quantum information applications, it is crucial to develop sources delivering entangled quantum photon states with on‐demand tunability. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate the concept of a widely tunable quantum light source based on spontaneous parametric down‐conversion in a simple nonlinear directional coupler. We show that spatial photon‐pair correlations and entanglement can be reconfigured on‐demand by tuning the phase difference between the pump beams and the phase mismatch inside the structure. We experimentally demonstrate the generation of split states, robust N00N states, various intermediate regimes and biphoton steering on a single chip. Furthermore we theoretically investigate other regimes allowing all‐optically tunable generation of all Bell states and flexible control of path‐energy entanglement. Such wide‐range capabilities of a structure comprised of just two coupled nonlinear waveguides are attributed to the intricate interplay between linear coupling and nonlinear phase matching. This scheme provides an important advance towards the realization of reconfigurable quantum circuitry.
Burgeoning interest in random sequential adsorption (RSA) processes has led to a surge of theoretical results, but experimental work is lagging behind, due to a dearth of suitable techniques. This article reviews integrated-optical techniques for investigating the kinetics of RSA and related processes. The basic idea is to measure the phase shifts of guided waves, due to the adsorption of particles at the surface of a planar waveguide. The technique is very well suited to investigating 2-dimensional RSA, and can yield high-quality kinetic adsorption data, precise enough for rigorously testing theoretical predictions. The current state of the art allow adsorbed mass to be measured quasicontinuously with a precision of at least 1 ng/cm2. 相似文献