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Dive into the research topics where Amy C. Foster is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy C. Foster.


Optics Letters | 2012

Ultralow power continuous-wave frequency conversion in hydrogenated amorphous silicon waveguides.

Ke-Yao Wang; Amy C. Foster

We demonstrate nonlinear frequency conversion in hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) with conversion efficiency of -13dB at telecommunication data rates. Conversion bandwidths of 150nm are measured in CW regime at telecommunication wavelengths.


Optics Express | 2012

Waveguide-fed optical hybrid plasmonic patch nano-antenna

Leila Yousefi; Amy C. Foster

We propose a novel optical hybrid plasmonic patch nano-antenna for operation at the standard telecommunication wavelength of 1550 nm. The nano-antenna is designed to be compatible with a hybrid plasmonic waveguide through matching of both the operational mode and the wave impedance. The antenna is designed to receive the optical signal from a planar waveguide and redirect the signal out of plane, and is therefore useful for inter- or intra-chip optical communications and sensing. The transmission line model in conjunction with surface plasmon theory is used to develop analytical formulas for design and analysis, and a 3-dimensional full-wave numerical method is used to validate the design. The proposed device provides a bandwidth of more than 15 THz, a gain of 5.6 dB, and an efficiency of 87%. Furthermore, by designing an 8 × 8 array of the proposed antenna, a directivity of 20 dBi and steering of the beam angle are achieved by controlling the relative phase shift between elements of the array.


Optics Express | 2012

Ultralow-power all-optical processing of high-speed data signals in deposited silicon waveguides

Ke-Yao Wang; Keith G. Petrillo; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Foster

Utilizing a 6-mm-long hydrogenated amorphous silicon nanowaveguide, we demonstrate error-free (BER < 10(-9)) 160-to-10 Gb/s OTDM demultiplexing using ultralow switching peak powers of 50 mW. This material is deposited at low temperatures enabling a path toward multilayer integration and therefore massive scaling of the number of devices in a single photonic chip.


Optics Letters | 2014

Multichannel photon-pair generation using hydrogenated amorphous silicon waveguides

Ke Yao Wang; Vesselin G. Velev; Kim Fook Lee; Abijith S. Kowligy; Prem Kumar; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Foster; Yu Ping Huang

We demonstrate highly efficient photon-pair generation using an 8 mm long hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) waveguide in far-detuned multiple wavelength channels simultaneously, measuring a coincidence-to-accidental ratio as high as 400. We also characterize the contamination from Raman scattering and show it to be insignificant over a spectrum span of at least 5 THz. Our results highlight a-Si:H as a potential high-performance, CMOS-compatible platform for large-scale quantum applications, particularly those based on the use of multiplexed quantum signals.


Optics Express | 2015

Wavelength-agile near-IR optical parametric oscillator using a deposited silicon waveguide.

Ke-Yao Wang; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Foster

Using a deposited hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) waveguide, we demonstrate ultra-broad bandwidth (60 THz) parametric amplification via four-wave mixing (FWM), and subsequently achieve the first silicon optical parametric oscillator (OPO) at near-IR wavelengths. Utilization of the time-dispersion-tuned technique provides an optical source with active wavelength tuning over 42 THz with a fixed pump wave.


Optics Express | 2014

Non-instantaneous optical nonlinearity of an a-Si:H nanowire waveguide.

Jeremiah J. Wathen; Vincent R. Pagán; Ryan J. Suess; Ke-Yao Wang; Amy C. Foster; Thomas E. Murphy

We use pump-probe spectroscopy and continuous wave cross-phase and cross-amplitude modulation measurements to study the optical nonlinearity of a hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) nanowire waveguide, and we compare the results to those of a crystalline silicon waveguide of similar dimensions. The a-Si:H nanowire shows essentially zero instantaneous two-photon absorption, but it displays a strong, long-lived non-instantaneous nonlinearity that is both absorptive and refractive. Power scaling measurements show that this non-instantaneous nonlinearity in a-Si:H scales as a third-order nonlinearity, and the refractive component possesses the opposite sign to that expected for free-carrier dispersion.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2014

GHz Near-IR Optical Parametric Amplifier using a Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon Waveguide

Ke-Yao Wang; Amy C. Foster

We demonstrate for the first time optical parametric amplification (OPA) operating at GHz rate in near-IR using hydrogenated amorphous silicon waveguide. The strong gain at this repetition rate shows its potential for telecommunication applications and a GHz-rate optical parametric oscillator.


Optics Letters | 2016

High-speed all-optical NAND/AND logic gates using four-wave mixing Bragg scattering.

Kangmei Li; Hong-Fu Ting; Mark A. Foster; Amy C. Foster

A high-speed all-optical NAND logic gate is proposed and experimentally demonstrated using four-wave mixing Bragg scattering in highly nonlinear fiber. NAND/AND logic functions are implemented at two wavelengths by encoding logic inputs on two pumps via on-off keying. A 15.2-dB depletion of the signal is obtained for NAND operation, and time domain measurements show 10-Gb/s NAND/AND logic operations with open eye diagrams. The approach can be readily extended to higher data rates and transferred to on-chip waveguide platforms.


Journal of Optics | 2015

GHz-rate optical parametric amplifier in hydrogenated amorphous silicon

Ke-Yao Wang; Amy C. Foster

We demonstrate optical parametric amplification operating at GHz-rates at telecommunications wavelengths using a hydrogenated amorphous silicon waveguide through the nonlinear optical process of four-wave mixing. We investigate how the parametric amplification scales with repetition rate. The ability to achieve amplification at GHz-repetition rates shows hydrogenated amorphous silicons potential for telecommunication applications and a GHz-rate optical parametric oscillator.


Optics Express | 2013

Highly sensitive ultrafast pulse characterization using hydrogenated amorphous silicon waveguides

Keith G. Petrillo; Ke-Yao Wang; Amy C. Foster; Mark A. Foster

We experimentally demonstrate frequency resolved optical gating (FROG) via four-wave mixing (FWM) in ultrahigh nonlinearity hydrogenated amorphous silicon waveguides. We demonstrate FROG characterization using a FWM architecture that mimics second harmonic generation (SHG) FROG for pulsewidths as low as 360 fs. Additionally, we demonstrate for the first time a FWM architecture analogous to third harmonic generation (THG) FROG and validate its ability to overcome the direction of time ambiguity of the SHG-like architecture. Both architectures allow for sensitivities suitable for future telecommunications signals.

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Mark A. Foster

Johns Hopkins University

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Ke-Yao Wang

Johns Hopkins University

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Hongcheng Sun

Johns Hopkins University

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Kangmei Li

Johns Hopkins University

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