2000 IEEE.
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IEEE Journal of Lightwave Technology
Volume 18 Number 8, August 2000
Table of Contents for this issue
Complete paper in PDF format
A Composite Optical Waveguide-Based
Polarimetric Interferometer for Chemical and Biological Sensing Applications
Zhi-mei Qi, Kiminori Itoh, Member, OSA Masayuki Murabayashi and Hiroyuki Yanagi
Page 1106.
Abstract:
A new polarimetric interferometer has been developed on the basis
of the phase difference between transverse electric (TE)0
and transverse magnetic (TM)0
modes in a composite optical waveguide (OWG). The composite OWG consists of
a single-mode potassium ion-exchanged planar waveguide overlaid with a high-index
thin film that has two tapered ends and supports only the TE0 mode. Applying tapered velocity coupling theory, we
found that the TE0 and TM0 modes coexisting in the potassium ion-exchanged layer
were separated in the thin film region of the composite OWG: the TE0 mode was coupled into the thin film while the
TM0 mode was confined in the potassium
ion-exchanged layer. Interference occurs between TE-and TM-polarized output
components when a single output beam is passed through a 45°-polarized analyzer. The phase difference
between both orthogonal output components is very
sensitive to the superstrate index nc in
the thin film region. Our experimental results indicate that a slight change
of
nc = 3.71 × 10-6 results
in the phase-difference variation of
= 1°
for a 5-mm-long TiO2/K+ composite OWG with a 34-nm-thick TiO
2 film. Such a simple polarimetric interferometer
can be applied to chemical or biological sensors by modifying the upper film
surface of the composite OWG with a chemically or biologically active substance.
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