Trimming and ultra-wide bandwidth expansion of silicon frequency comb spectra with self-adaptive boundary waveguides
Abstract
Dispersion engineering is among the most important steps towards a promising optical frequency comb. We propose a new and general approach to trim frequency combs using a self-adaptive boundary of the optical mode at different wavelengths in a sub-wavelength structured waveguide. The feasibility of ultra-wide bandwidth dispersion engineering comes from the fact that light at different wavelengths automatically self-adapts to slightly different effective spatial spans determined by the effective indices of the mode. Using this self-adaptive variation on the confinement, we open up the window of low-anomalous dispersion in a large wavelength range, and theoretically demonstrate frequency combs with improved bandwidths with respect to the state-of-art in several different waveguide configurations considered, for a matter of illustration, in the silicon photonic platform. This strategy opens up a new design space for trimming the spectrum of frequency combs using high-index-contrast platforms and provides benefit to various versatile nonlinear applications in which the manipulation of energy spacing and phase matching are pivotal.
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