We design, fabricate, and measure a novel spectrometer based on meta-surface structures, aiming to optimize its spectroscopic resolution within a band from 1.7 to 2.5 THz. The latter corresponds to a bandwidth of 38%, being comparable with a grating spectrometer. The meta-surfaces apply unit cells that consist of double-anchor structures based on gold, polyimide and gold triple layers. Several quantum cascade lasers that operate at slightly different frequencies around 2.1 THz were used to validate the spectrometer. We have measured a resolving power R of 273 and an efficiency of 78 %. Our results demonstrate for the first time a centimeter-sized, light weight FIR spectrometer with a promising resolution, which has potential to replace the half meter-sized, heavy grating based spectrometers in this wavelength band.
Achieving high degree of tunability in photonic devices has been a focal point in the field of integrated photonics for several decades, enabling a wide range of applications from telecommunication and biochemical sensing to fundamental quantum photonic experiments. We introduce a novel technique to engineer the thermal response of photonic devices resulting in large and deterministic wavelength shifts across various photonic platforms, such as amorphous Silicon Carbide (a-SiC), Silicon Nitride (SiN) and Silicon-On-Insulator (SOI). In this paper, we demonstrate bi-directional thermal tuning of photonic devices fabricated on a single chip. Our method can be used to design high-sensitivity photonic temperature sensors, low-power Mach-Zehnder interferometers and more complex photonics circuits.
Superconducting nanowire single photon detectors (SNSPDs) have demonstrated advantages over traditional detectors in many fields [1]. Most fiber-coupled SNSPDs are coupled to single mode fibers, limiting their usability for applications where large surface area detectors are needed, for example fluorescence detection and satellite-based quantum communication [2][3]. Other important requirements for many applications are broadband detection efficiency, and low timing jitter [4]. So far, the increased meander length of multimode detectors, and the therefore increased kinetic inductance and number of imperfections due to film inhomogeneities have limited the timing jitter [5]. Moreover, combining low timing jitter with high detection efficiency and low dark count rate in one device is challenging due to the tradeoffs between different properties of SNSPDs [6].
In this paper, we achieved high efficiency and strong saturation over a broad wavelength range with a low timing jitter of 16.99 ps while maintaining a low dark count rate of < 0.2 Hz for an SNSPD coupled to a 50 µm core multimode fiber. To enhance the broadband absorption from 405 nm to 830 nm, detectors were fabricated on an optimized SiO2 cavity and Aluminum mirror. The geometry of the nanowire was also tuned to reach a good internal saturation of efficiency over the visible/NIR range but also to carry high current to get a large signal. Furthermore, a cryogenic readout amplifier was optimized to improve the signal to noise ratio and thus lead to high time resolution. Our devices can be readily used to enable higher resolution and faster quantum optics, bio-imaging, laser ranging and other optical experiments.
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