Light-beam steering that is extremely wavelength dependent has been demonstrated by using photonic crystals fabricated on Si. The scanning span reached 50° with only a 1% shift of incident wavelength at around 1 μm. The resulting angular dispersion is two orders of magnitude larger than that achieved with conventional prisms or gratings. The application of such superprism phenomena promises to enable the fabrication of integrated micro lightwave circuits that will allow more efficient use of wavelength resources when used in wavelength multiplexers/demultiplexers or dispersion compensators by enabling lower loss and broader bandwidth. © 1999 American Institute of Physics.
CITATION STYLE
Kosaka, H., Kawashima, T., Tomita, A., Notomi, M., Tamamura, T., Sato, T., & Kawakami, S. (1999). Photonic crystals for micro lightwave circuits using wavelength-dependent angular beam steering. Applied Physics Letters, 74(10), 1370–1372. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.123553
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