Midinfrared spectroscopy is a universal way to identify chemical and biological substances. Indeed, when interacting with a light beam, most molecules are responsible for absorption at specific wavelengths in the mid-IR spectrum, allowing to detect and quantify small traces of substances. On-chip broadband light sources in the mid-infrared are thus of significant interest for compact sensing devices. In that regard, supercontinuum generation offers a mean to efficiently perform coherent light conversion over an ultrawide spectral range, in a single and compact device. This work reports the experimental demonstration of on-chip two-octave supercontinuum generation in the mid-infrared wavelength, ranging from 3 to 13 μm (that is larger than 2500 cm –1 ) and covering almost the full transparency window of germanium. Such an ultrawide spectrum is achieved thanks to the unique features of Ge-rich graded SiGe waveguides, which allow second-order dispersion tailoring and low propagation losses over a wide wavelength range. The influence of the pump wavelength and power on the supercontinuum spectra has been studied. A good agreement between the numerical simulations and the experimental results is reported. Furthermore, a very high coherence is predicted in the entire spectrum. These results pave the way for wideband, coherent, and compact mid-infrared light sources by using a single device and compatible with large-scale fabrication processes.
Miniaturized optical spectrometers providing broadband operation and fine resolution have an immense potential for applications in remote sensing, non-invasive medical diagnostics and astronomy. Indeed, optical spectrometers working in the mid-infrared spectral range have garnered a great interest for their singular capability to monitor the main absorption fingerprints of a wide range of chemical and biological substances. Fourier-transform spectrometers (FTS) are a particularly interesting solution for the on-chip integration due to their superior robustness against fabrication imperfections. However, the performance of current on-chip FTS implementations is limited by tradeoffs in bandwidth and resolution. Here, we propose a new FTS approach that gathers the advantages of spatial heterodyning and optical path tuning by thermo-optic effect to overcome this tradeoff. The high resolution is provided by spatial multiplexing among different interferometers with increasing imbalance length, while the broadband operation is enabled by fine tuning of the optical path delay in each interferometer harnessing the thermo-optic effect. Capitalizing on this concept, we experimentally demonstrate a mid-infrared SiGe FTS, with a resolution better than 15 cm−1 and a bandwidth of 603 cm−1 near 7.7 μm wavelength with a 10 MZI array. This is a resolution comparable to state-of-the-art on-chip mid-infrared spectrometers with a 4-fold bandwidth increase with a footprint divided by a factor two.
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