Presentation + Paper
4 March 2019 Miniaturization of mid-IR sensors on Si: challenges and perspectives
Sergio Nicoletti, Jean-Marc Fédéli, Maryse Fournier, Pierre Labeye, Pierre Barritault, Adrien Marchant, Alain Glière, Alexandre Teulle, Jean-Guillaume Coutard, Laurent Duraffourg
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 10923, Silicon Photonics XIV; 109230H (2019) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2506759
Event: SPIE OPTO, 2019, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
The Mid-IR spectral range (2.5 μm up to 12 μm) has been considered as the paradigm for innovative silicon photonic devices. In less than a decade, chemical sensing has become a key application for Mid-IR silicon photonic devices because of the growing potential in spectroscopy, materials processing, chemical and biomolecular sensing, security and industry applications. Measuring in this spectral range, usually called molecule fingerprint region, allows to address a unique combination of fundamental absorption bands orders of magnitude stronger than overtone and combination bands in the near IR. This feature provides highly selective, sensitive and unequivocal identification of the chemicals.

Progress in Cascade Laser technology (QCL and ICL) allows to select emission wavelengths suitable to target the detection of specific chemicals. With these sources, novel spectroscopic tools allowing real-time in-situ detection of gasses down to traces are nowadays commercially available.

Mid-IR Si photonics has developed a novel class of integrated components leading to the integration at chip level of the main building blocks required for chemical sensing, i.e. the source, the PICs and the detector. Three main directions of improvement can be drawn: i) extend the range of wavelengths available from a single source, ii) move beam handling and routing from discrete optics to PICs and iii) investigate detection schemes for a fully integrated on-chip sensing.

This paper reviews recent key achievements in the miniaturization and the co-integration of photonics devices at chip and packaging level to address cost, size and power consumption. Perspectives on potential applications will also be presented.
Conference Presentation
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Sergio Nicoletti, Jean-Marc Fédéli, Maryse Fournier, Pierre Labeye, Pierre Barritault, Adrien Marchant, Alain Glière, Alexandre Teulle, Jean-Guillaume Coutard, and Laurent Duraffourg "Miniaturization of mid-IR sensors on Si: challenges and perspectives ", Proc. SPIE 10923, Silicon Photonics XIV, 109230H (4 March 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2506759
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CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Mid-IR

Sensors

Quantum cascade lasers

Photonic integrated circuits

Semiconducting wafers

Waveguides

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