TY - JOUR
T1 - 3D-Nanoprinted Antiresonant Hollow-Core Microgap Waveguide
T2 - An on-Chip Platform for Integrated Photonic Devices and Sensors
AU - Bürger, Johannes
AU - Schalles, Vera
AU - Kim, Jisoo
AU - Jang, Bumjoon
AU - Zeisberger, Matthias
AU - Gargiulo, Julian
AU - De S. Menezes, Leonardo
AU - Schmidt, Markus A.
AU - Maier, Stefan A.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge financial support from the German Research Foundation via Grants MA 4699/2–1, MA 4699/7–1, SCHM2655/11–1, SCHM2655/15–1, SCHM2655/8–1, EXC 2089/1–390776260 (e-conversion). J.G. acknowledges funding from the European Commission for the Marie-Skłodowska-Curie action (H2020:797044). S.A.M. additionally acknowledges the Lee-Lucas Chair in Physics.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/9/21
Y1 - 2022/9/21
N2 - Due to their unique capabilities, hollow-core waveguides are playing an increasingly important role, especially in meeting the growing demand for integrated and low-cost photonic devices and sensors. Here, we present the antiresonant hollow-core microgap waveguide as a platform for the on-chip investigation of light-gas interaction over centimeter-long distances. The design consists of hollow-core segments separated by gaps that allow external access to the core region, while samples with lengths up to 5 cm were realized on silicon chips through 3D-nanoprinting using two-photon absorption based direct laser writing. The agreement of mathematical models, numerical simulations and experiments illustrates the importance of the antiresonance effect in that context. Our study shows the modal loss, the effect of gap size and the spectral tuning potential, with highlights including extremely broadband transmission windows (>200 nm), very high contrast resonance (>60 dB), exceptionally high structural openness factor (18%) and spectral control by nanoprinting (control over dimensions with step sizes (i.e., increments) of 60 nm). The application potential was demonstrated in the context of laser scanning absorption spectroscopy of ammonia, showing diffusion speeds comparable to bulk diffusion and a low detection limit. Due to these unique properties, application of this platform can be anticipated in a variety of spectroscopy-related fields, including bioanalytics, environmental sciences, and life sciences.
AB - Due to their unique capabilities, hollow-core waveguides are playing an increasingly important role, especially in meeting the growing demand for integrated and low-cost photonic devices and sensors. Here, we present the antiresonant hollow-core microgap waveguide as a platform for the on-chip investigation of light-gas interaction over centimeter-long distances. The design consists of hollow-core segments separated by gaps that allow external access to the core region, while samples with lengths up to 5 cm were realized on silicon chips through 3D-nanoprinting using two-photon absorption based direct laser writing. The agreement of mathematical models, numerical simulations and experiments illustrates the importance of the antiresonance effect in that context. Our study shows the modal loss, the effect of gap size and the spectral tuning potential, with highlights including extremely broadband transmission windows (>200 nm), very high contrast resonance (>60 dB), exceptionally high structural openness factor (18%) and spectral control by nanoprinting (control over dimensions with step sizes (i.e., increments) of 60 nm). The application potential was demonstrated in the context of laser scanning absorption spectroscopy of ammonia, showing diffusion speeds comparable to bulk diffusion and a low detection limit. Due to these unique properties, application of this platform can be anticipated in a variety of spectroscopy-related fields, including bioanalytics, environmental sciences, and life sciences.
KW - antiresonance guidance
KW - hollow-core waveguide
KW - integrated photonics spectroscopy
KW - leaky modes
KW - optical gas sensing
KW - two-photon direct laser writing
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85137935458
U2 - 10.1021/acsphotonics.2c00725
DO - 10.1021/acsphotonics.2c00725
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85137935458
SN - 2330-4022
VL - 9
SP - 3012
EP - 3024
JO - ACS Photonics
JF - ACS Photonics
IS - 9
ER -