Self-Organized Optical Pathways in Optofluidic Photonic Crystals
Abstract
This paper reports FDTD simulations of optofluidic reconfiguration in two-dimensional silicon photonic crystal waveguides, treating structural plasticity (the creation and destruction of optical pathways) via selective fluid infiltration. Using MPB eigenmode analysis, we decouple bandgap narrowing from defect-mode weakening, showing that defect weakening dominates (2.4 times faster transmission decay than bandgap narrowing at CS2 indices). Infiltration topology controls signal routing (L-bend selectivity S = 0.98), though modulation depth is weak (Delta varepsilon/ varepsilon textSi = 11 %). A phenomenological optothermal feedback model produces self-organized pathways that achieve 63 % of a hand-designed waveguide's bandgap transmission (7.6 times the heavily suppressed empty-crystal baseline). Amplitude competition between counter-propagating sources produces strong, monotonic pathway steering (DeltaCOMx from +0.03 to +4.92 ;a), while pulsed spike-timing-dependent plasticity yields a predictable null result: the timing-sensitive cross-term is suppressed by >102 when pulse delays exceed the temporal pulse width. The results provide benchmarks and identify physical limits for bio-inspired reconfigurable optofluidic photonics.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.