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Dive into the research topics where Daryl M. Beggs is active.

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Featured researches published by Daryl M. Beggs.


Optics Letters | 2008

Ultracompact and low-power optical switch based on silicon photonic crystals

Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas P. White; Liam O'Faolain; Thomas F. Krauss

Switching light is one of the most fundamental functions of an optical circuit. As such, optical switches are a major research topic in photonics, and many types of switches have been realized. Most optical switches operate by imposing a phase shift between two sections of the device to direct light from one port to another, or to switch it on and off, the major constraint being that typical refractive index changes are very small. Conventional solutions address this issue by making long devices, thus increasing the footprint, or by using resonant enhancement, thus reducing the bandwidth. We present a slow-light-enhanced optical switch that is 36 times shorter than a conventional device for the same refractive index change and has a switching length of 5.2 microm.


Journal of Optics | 2010

Dispersion engineered slow light in photonic crystals: a comparison

Sebastian A. Schulz; Liam O'Faolain; Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas P. White; Andrea Melloni; Thomas F. Krauss

We review the different types of dispersion engineered photonic crystal waveguides that have been developed for slow light applications. We introduce the group index bandwidth product (GBP) and the loss per delay in terms of dB ns −1 as two key figures of merit to describe such structures and compare the different experimental realizations based on these figures. A key outcome of the comparison is that slow light based on photonic crystals performs as well or better than slow light based on coupled ring resonators.


IEEE Photonics Journal | 2010

Compact Optical Switches and Modulators Based on Dispersion Engineered Photonic Crystals

Liam O'Faolain; Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas P. White; Tobias Kampfrath; Kobus Kuipers; Thomas F. Krauss

We use slow-light photonic crystals to enhance optical switching and modulation in silicon. By using dispersion-engineered designs, a switch as short as 5 ¿m was achieved, in which we have demonstrated rerouting of optical pulses on a 3-ps time scale through the absorption of a femtosecond pulse. We additionally demonstrate a modulator with a Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) configuration with flat-band slow-light photonic crystal phase shifters that is designed to give a large group-index-bandwidth product. An extinction ratio in excess of 15 dB is obtained over the entire 11-nm bandwidth of the modulator.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Polarization Engineering in Photonic Crystal Waveguides for Spin-Photon Entanglers.

Andrew Young; A. C. T. Thijssen; Daryl M. Beggs; Petros Androvitsaneas; L. Kuipers; John Rarity; S. Hughes; Ruth Oulton

By performing a full analysis of the projected local density of states (LDOS) in a photonic crystal waveguide, we show that phase plays a crucial role in the symmetry of the light-matter interaction. By considering a quantum dot (QD) spin coupled to a photonic crystal waveguide (PCW) mode, we demonstrate that the light-matter interaction can be asymmetric, leading to unidirectional emission and a deterministic entangled photon source. Further we show that understanding the phase associated with both the LDOS and the QD spin is essential for a range of devices that can be realized with a QD in a PCW. We also show how suppression of quantum interference prevents dipole induced reflection in the waveguide, and highlight a fundamental breakdown of the semiclassical dipole approximation for describing light-matter interactions in these spin dependent systems.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2009

Ultrashort Photonic Crystal Optical Switch Actuated by a Microheater

Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas P. White; Lee Cairns; Liam O'Faolain; Thomas F. Krauss

We demonstrate a silicon photonic crystal (PhC) optical switch with a 20-mus response time controlled by a thermo-optic microheater. The switch consists of a dispersion engineered PhC directional coupler that is only 4.9 mum long. Optical and electrical isolation is provided by backfilling the holes and embedding the PhC in a silica cladding to produce a vertically symmetric structure that is more robust than a membrane geometry. No increase in optical loss is observed due to the silica cladding, despite operating above the lightline; the insertion loss for airbridge and silica embedded structures are comparable at 1-2 dB.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Ultrafast Tunable Optical Delay Line Based on Indirect Photonic Transitions

Daryl M. Beggs; Isabella H. Rey; Tobias Kampfrath; N. Rotenberg; L. Kuipers; Thomas F. Krauss

We introduce the concept of an indirect photonic transition and demonstrate its use in a dynamic delay line to alter the group velocity of an optical pulse. Operating on an ultrafast time scale, we show continuously tunable delays of up to 20 ps, using a slow light photonic crystal waveguide only 300 μm in length. Our approach is flexible, in that individual pulses in a pulse stream can be controlled independently, which we demonstrate by operating on pulses separated by just 30 ps. The two-step indirect transition is demonstrated here with a 30% conversion efficiency.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Ultrafast rerouting of light via slow modes in a nanophotonic directional coupler

Tobias Kampfrath; Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas P. White; M. Burresi; D. van Oosten; Thomas F. Krauss; L. Kuipers

We acknowledge funding through the EU FP6-FET “SPLASH” project. This work is also part of the research program of FOM, which is financially supported by the NWO.


Optics Express | 2010

Statistical fluctuations of transmission in slow light photonic-crystal waveguides

Simon Mazoyer; Philippe Lalanne; Jean-Claude Rodier; Jean-Paul Hugonin; Marko Spasenović; L. Kuipers; Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas F. Krauss

We report statistical fluctuations for the transmissions of a series of photonic-crystal waveguides (PhCWs) that are supposedly identical and that only differ because of statistical structural fabrication-induced imperfections. For practical PhCW lengths offering tolerable -3dB attenuation with moderate group indices (n(g) approximately 60), the transmission spectra contains very narrow peaks (Q approximately 20,000) that vary from one waveguide to another. The physical origin of the peaks is explained by calculating the actual electromagnetic-field pattern inside the waveguide. The peaks that are observed in an intermediate regime between the ballistic and localization transports are responsible for a smearing of the local density of states, for a rapid broadening of the probability density function of the transmission, and bring a severe constraint on the effective use of slow light for on-chip optical information processing. The experimental results are quantitatively supported by theoretical results obtained with a coupled-Bloch-mode approach that takes into account multiple scattering and localization effects.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Ultrafast tilting of the dispersion of a photonic crystal and adiabatic spectral compression of light pulses

Daryl M. Beggs; Thomas F. Krauss; L. Kuipers; Tobias Kampfrath

We demonstrate, by theory and experiment, the ultrafast tilting of the dispersion curve of a photonic-crystal waveguide following the absorption of a femtosecond pump pulse. By shaping the pump-beam cross section with a nanometric shadow mask, different waveguide eigenmodes acquire different spatial overlap with the perturbing pump, leading to a local flattening of the dispersion by up to 11%. We find that such partial mode perturbation can be used to adiabatically compress the spectrum of a light pulse traveling through the waveguide.


Optics Letters | 2007

Compact polarization rotators for integrated polarization diversity in InP-based waveguides

Daryl M. Beggs; Michele Midrio; Thomas F. Krauss

We present the design, fabrication, and operation of a polarization converter based on angled waveguides in the InP/InGaAsP material system. By combining design elements from mode evolution and birefringent devices, the total device length is kept short (less than 50 microm) and the insertion efficiency high at 81%+/-19%, which corresponds to an insertion loss of 1 dB. Devices operate broadband, i.e., the polarization conversion exceeds 15 dB over a 100 nm wavelength range. A polarization rotator with these specifications is a prime candidate for use in an integrated polarization diversity scheme.

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L. Kuipers

MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology

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Thomas P. White

Australian National University

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Liam O'Faolain

University of St Andrews

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