Français

The Application of Femtosecond Laser in Precision Photonics Manufacturing

755
2024-02-28 14:27:52
Voir la traduction

Femtosecond laser emits ultra short light pulses with a duration of less than 1 picosecond, reaching the femtosecond domain. The characteristics of femtosecond lasers are extremely short pulse width and high peak intensity.

Ultra short blasting can minimize waste heat, ensure precise material processing, and minimize incidental damage. Their peak intensities can cause nonlinear optical interactions, such as multiphoton ionization and plasma formation, providing precise spatial control of laser energy for various applications.

The nonlinear constraint effect of femtosecond lasers allows for nanoscale resolution, achieving features below the diffraction limit. These lasers have a wide range of applications as they can process various materials, including metals, semiconductors, ceramics, polymers, and composite materials, without the need for masks or photoresists. Their ability to focus on transparent materials also helps to create complex three-dimensional structures, which is crucial for manufacturing integrated photonic chips.

Overall, femtosecond lasers are an ideal choice for precision microfabrication and photonics manufacturing.
Accurate nanoscale control of unit structures and gaps is crucial for effectively controlling light in photonic crystals in the near-infrared and visible light ranges. Femtosecond lasers perform excellently in manufacturing 3D micro/nanostructures directly in transparent materials, utilizing their ultra short pulse duration to achieve excellent accuracy.

A study published in "Light: Science and Applications" demonstrates this by introducing a method for manufacturing photonic crystal structures using nanoscale femtosecond laser multi beam lithography. Researchers focused a controllable multi beam light field inside the crystal and combined it with chemical etching. This method can precisely control the structural units and gaps of sub wavelength size, overcoming the limitations of single beam processing.

The proposed method is cost-effective and simple, and can achieve 3D photonic crystal structures within crystals, with potential applications in optical communication and manipulation.

The advancement of materials science and nanofabrication has led to the exploration of periodic nanostructured surfaces, such as plasma and dielectric metasurfaces, for advanced photonics applications. Traditionally, photolithography methods have been used to process these periodic surface structures, which can be both complex and time-consuming.

However, focusing on femtosecond lasers provides a one-step, maskless, and efficient alternative solution suitable for various materials. This allows for the creation of features smaller than the laser wavelength through laser-induced PSS.

Recent studies, particularly those studying wide bandgap transparent crystals such as LiNbO, have demonstrated the potential of femtosecond lasers in manufacturing large-area LIPSS with enhanced light absorption through controlled heating strategies. This provides a promising approach for the precision manufacturing of dielectric crystals other than LiNbO
Femtosecond laser direct writing provides enormous potential for manufacturing 3D photonic integrated circuits on transparent substrates. However, a key challenge of this technology is to achieve smooth and significant refractive index changes within the laser irradiation area, which hinders the development of compact PICs.

A study published in the journal Science of China and Physics, Mechanics, and Astronomy has solved this problem by proposing a significant method to suppress the bending loss of small curvature radius waveguides, paving the way for miniaturization of 3D photonic integrated circuits.
The proposed method involves the use of femtosecond lasers to directly write multiple modified tracks into fused silica, thereby enhancing the refractive index contrast and successfully reducing the bending loss of bent waveguides. This breakthrough is expected to improve the integration density and flexibility of 3D photonic devices.

Chemical etching after femtosecond laser irradiation utilizes laser-induced changes in chemical properties to selectively etch laser modified areas. This allows complex 3D micro nano structures to be directly written into the interior of dielectric materials. FLICE has been applied to create embedded hollow microstructures for microfluidics and 3D optofluids in glass.

Recent work has achieved over 100000 ultra-high etching selectivity in crystals such as YAG and sapphire. This makes it possible to create nanoscale 3D photonic lattices, waveguides, and nanopores without damaging the crystal.

As a maskless and high-precision 3D processing technology, femtosecond laser processing can perform surface lithography on materials such as thin films of lithium niobate. This breakthrough has successfully overcome the challenges in material integration and enabled the manufacturing of high-performance photonic components.

For example, researchers used femtosecond laser assisted chemical mechanical polishing lithography to create low loss waveguides and high Q microresonators on lithium niobate chips. This processing strategy has strong potential to functionalize different crystal platforms for integrated photonics.

The silicon ablation of femtosecond lasers involves the use of ultra short pulses to accurately remove materials from the silicon substrate. This process is crucial in precision photonics, as it can create complex structures with minimal thermal damage, enabling the manufacture of high-quality optical devices such as optical waveguides.

Researchers at RIKEN Advanced Photonics Center have developed a new technology called BiBurst mode, which uses GHz pulse pulses of femtosecond laser pulses grouped in MHz envelope for efficient and high-quality silicon ablation. These survey results are published in the International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing.

The team has demonstrated that using BiBurst mode can perform silicon ablation at a speed 4.5 times faster than single pulse mode and has excellent quality. This mechanism involves absorbing subsequent pulses at the absorption site generated by the previous pulse, which helps to improve efficiency. This breakthrough may have a significant impact on the basic research and industrial applications of femtosecond laser processing, thereby improving throughput and micro/nano processing accuracy.

Femtosecond laser writing stands out for its low cost, simplicity, and rapid prototyping capabilities, making it suitable for passive and reconfigurable integrated photonic circuits. The rapid reconfigurability of this technology makes it valuable for the initial evaluation of optical laboratories.
A study published in Applied Physics Letters used FLW technology to manufacture programmable dual qubit quantum photon processors. The manufactured FLW quantum processor achieves high fidelity, with a single qubit gate of 99.3% and a double qubit CNOT gate of 94.4%.
Despite challenges such as propagation loss and low refractive index contrast, FLW chips exhibit natural low loss coupling with standard single-mode fibers and have advantages in quantum photon experiments.

Source: Laser Net

Recommandations associées
  • The team led by Gao Chunqing and Fu Shiyao from Beijing University of Technology has made significant breakthroughs in the study of photon angular momentum regulation

    Recently, a team led by Gao Chunqing and Fu Shiyao from the School of Optoelectronics at Beijing University of Technology combined optical spatial coordinate transformation with photon spin Hall effect to construct a photon angular momentum filter for the first time internationally, achieving on-demand regulation of photon spin angular momentum and orbital angular momentum.The related achievements...

    2023-10-20
    Voir la traduction
  • Innovative nanoparticle analysis: achieving breakthrough 3D imaging using X-ray lasers

    The latest progress in X-ray laser technology has opened up a new era of nanoscale exploration, bringing unprecedented opportunities for materials science and nanotechnology. Researchers have developed a novel imaging technique that can directly visualize separated nanosamples in free flight, capturing their complex structures with stunning details. This breakthrough method relies on single cohere...

    2024-03-05
    Voir la traduction
  • 国内自主研发首套碳化硅晶锭激光剥离设备投产

           近日,从江苏通用半导体有限公司传来消息,由该公司自主研发的国内首套的8英寸碳化硅晶锭激光全自动剥离设备正式交付碳化硅衬底生产领域头部企业广州南砂晶圆半导体技术有限公司,并投入生产。 图:8英寸SiC晶锭激光全自动剥离设备       该设备可实现6英寸和8英寸碳化硅晶锭的全自动分片,包含晶锭上料、晶锭研磨、激光切割、晶片分离和晶片收集,一举填补了国内碳化硅晶锭激光剥离设备领域研发、制造的市场空白,突破了国外的技术封锁,将极大地提升我国碳化硅芯片产业的自主化、产业化水平。       该设备年可剥离碳化硅衬底20000片,实现良率95%以上,与传统的线切割工艺相比,大幅降低了产品损耗,而设备售价仅仅是国外同类产品的1/3。       近年来,碳化硅功率器件在大功率半导体市场中所占的份额不断提高,并被广泛应用于新能源汽车、城市轨道交通、风力发电、高速移动、物联网等一系列领域...

    2024-08-26
    Voir la traduction
  • Scientists have demonstrated a new way to make infrared light from quantum dots, and the experiments are still in the early stages

    Scientists at the University of Chicago have demonstrated a way to create infrared light using colloidal quantum dots. The researchers say this approach shows great promise; Although the experiment is still in its early stages, these quantum dots are already as efficient as existing conventional methods.These points could one day form the basis of infrared lasers, as well as small and inexpensive ...

    2023-09-08
    Voir la traduction
  • The new chip opens the door to artificial intelligence computing at the speed of light

    Engineers at the University of Pennsylvania have developed a new chip that uses light waves instead of electricity to perform complex mathematical operations necessary for training artificial intelligence. This chip has the potential to fundamentally accelerate the processing speed of computers while reducing their energy consumption.The design of a silicon photonic chip was the first to combine t...

    2024-02-18
    Voir la traduction