The manipulation of optical modes directly in a multimode waveguide without affecting the transmission of undesired signal carriers is of significance to realize a flexible and simple structured optical network-on-chip. In this Letter, an arbitrary optical mode and wavelength carrier access scheme is proposed based on a series of multimode microring resonators and one multimode bus waveguide with constant width. As a proof-of-concept, a three-mode (de)multiplexing device is designed, fabricated, and experimentally demonstrated. A new, to the best of our knowledge, phase-matching idea is employed to keep the bus waveguide width constant. The mode coupling regions and transmission regions of the microring resonators are designed carefully to selectively couple and transmit different optical modes. The extinction ratio of the microring resonators is larger than 21.0 dB. The mode and wavelength cross-talk for directly (de)multiplexing are less than −12.8 dB and −19.0 dB, respectively. It would be a good candidate for future large-scale multidimensional optical networks.
In this paper, we propose and demonstrate a 4×4 non-blocking optical router utilizing 8 mode (de)multiplexers and a 4×4 microring-based grid network, which can passively assign signals carried by optical wavelength and mode channels from an arbitrary input port to corresponding output ports without additional switch time, realizing the non-blocking property. The proposed device is fabricated on a silicon-on-insulator platform using the standard Complementary Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor (CMOS) fabrication processes. The insertion loss is lower than 5.7 dB including the loss of the auxiliary mode (de)multiplexers (AMUXs), while the crosstalk is lower than −15.6 dB for all routing states. Moreover, the transmission spectra from the input ports to the next cascading device are also measured to demonstrate the feasibility of further expanding via cascading multiple blocks, with the insertion loss and crosstalk lower than 7.1 dB (including the mode coupling loss of AMUXs) and −16.4 dB, respectively. The 12 Gbps dynamic transmission experiment is demonstrated with clear and open eye diagrams, illustrating the utility of the device. The device has high geometrical symmetry and good scalability, we exhibit all solutions to expand the 4×4 optical router to 8×8 and 16×16 optical routers with the advantages and deficiencies of each solution discussed.
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