Performance Analysis and Evaluation of Photonic Waveguides for Multiprocessor Communications
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Abstract
After dominating the electronics industry for decades, silicon is on the verge of becoming the
material of choice for the photonics industry: the traditional stronghold of III–V
semiconductors. Stimulated by a series of recent breakthroughs and propelled by increasing
investments by governments and the private sector, silicon photonics is now the most active
discipline within the field of integrated optics. This paper provides an overview of the state
of the art in silicon photonics and outlines challenges that must be overcome before largescale
commercialization can occur. In particular, for realization of integration with CMOS
very large scale integration (VLSI), silicon photonics must be compatible with the economics
of silicon manufacturing and must operate within thermal constraints of VLSI chips. The
impact of silicon photonics will reach beyond optical communication—its traditionally
anticipated application. Silicon has excellent linear and nonlinear optical properties in the
midwave infrared (IR) spectrum. These properties, along with silicon’s excellent thermal
conductivity and optical damage threshold, open up the possibility for a new class of mid-IR
photonic devices.
Photonic band gap (PBG) materials are periodic dielectric structures that forbid propagation
of electromagnetic waves in a certain frequency range. They are able to engineer the most
fundamental properties of electromagnetic waves, such as the laws of refraction, diffraction
and emission of light from atoms. Such PBG materials not only open up a variety of possible
applications, but also give rise to new physics. Unlike electronic micro-cavity, optical
waveguides in a PBG microchip can simultaneously conduct hundreds of wavelength
channels of information in a three-dimensional circuit path.
The thesis starts with the numerical modeling techniques for modeling as well as simulation
of photonic crystal designs are introduced. The modeling techniques include finite difference
time domain (FDTD) method and Plane Wave Expansion (PWE) method. The FDTD method
has been represented in context to modal and polarization properties of the photonic design
and PWE method has been represented in context to band gap analysis of the designed
photonic structure.
[IV]
Then a short review of Photonic band gap crystals as well as the some essential basics of
photonic crystal fibers material modeling and then proceeds to a discussion on the guiding
mechanism including modified total internal reflection and photonic band gap guidance are
reviewed. The main properties of solid core PCFs that includes dispersion tailoring, ultra
high nonlinearities, birefringent features are being studied. A short review of the loss
mechanisms is also presented.
The FDTD modeling of photonic crystal waveguide in different materials is done by taking
the rectangular lattice waveguide structure and dielectric material of user defined constant
refractive index. The default material is taken to be air with unit refractive index. The FDTD
simulation and analyses of modeled crystal is done that presents the reflectance and
transmittance properties of the photonic band gap crystal-the electric and magnetic field
component for transverse electric polarization and the poynting vector also. The band gap
analysis for the modeled photonic crystal is done by PWE method by taking a same tolerance
factor for all the materials simulations and thus band gaps are located and analyzed.
Description
THE WORK WILL BE HELPFUL IN THE FIELD OF NANOTECHNOLOGY AND PHOTONIC COMMUNICATION.
