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Dive into the research topics where J. Lapointe is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Lapointe.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2006

A Silicon-on-Insulator Photonic Wire Based Evanescent Field Sensor

A. Densmore; D.-X. Xu; P. Waldron; Siegfried Janz; Pavel Cheben; J. Lapointe; A. Delage; B. Lamontagne; Jens H. Schmid; E. Post

We demonstrate a new, highly sensitive evanescent field sensor using silicon-on-insulator (SOI) photonic wire waveguides. Theoretical analysis shows that thin SOI waveguides can provide higher sensitivity over devices based in all other common planar waveguide material systems for the probing of both thin adsorbed biomolecular layers and bulk homogeneous solutions. A Si photonic wire waveguide was incorporated into a Mach-Zehnder interferometer based sensor, configured to monitor the index change of a homogeneous solution. High effective index change of 0.31 per refractive index unit (RIU) change of the solution was measured, confirming theoretical predictions


Optics Express | 2008

Folded cavity SOI microring sensors for high sensitivity and real time measurement of biomolecular binding

D.-X. Xu; A. Densmore; André Delâge; P. Waldron; Ross McKinnon; Siegfried Janz; J. Lapointe; Gregory P. Lopinski; T. Mischki; E. Post; Pavel Cheben; Jens H. Schmid

We demonstrate folded waveguide ring resonators for biomolecular sensing. We show that extending the ring cavity length increases the resonator quality factor, and thereby enhances the sensor resolution and minimum level of detection, while at the same time relaxing the tolerance on the coupling conditions to provide stable and large resonance contrast. The folded spiral path geometry allows a 1.2 mm long ring waveguide to be enclosed in a 150 microm diameter sensor area. The spiral cavity resonator is used to monitor the streptavidin protein binding with a detection limit of approximately 3 pg/mm(2), or a total mass of approximately 5 fg. The real time measurements are used to analyze the kinetics of biotin-streptavidin binding.


Optics Letters | 2009

Silicon photonic wire biosensor array for multiplexed real-time and label-free molecular detection

A. Densmore; M. Vachon; D.-X. Xu; Siegfried Janz; R. Ma; Y. Li; Gregory P. Lopinski; André Delâge; J. Lapointe; Christian Luebbert; Q. Y. Liu; Pavel Cheben; Jens H. Schmid

We demonstrate a silicon photonic wire waveguide biosensor array chip for the simultaneous monitoring of different molecular binding reactions. The chip is compatible with automated commercial spotting tools and contains a monolithically integrated microfluidic channel for sample delivery. Each array sensor element is a 1.8-mm-long spiral waveguide folded within a 130 microm diameter spot and is incorporated in a balanced Mach-Zehnder interferometer with a near temperature independent response. The sensors are arranged in a 400 microm spacing grid pattern and are addressed through cascaded 1x2 optical power splitters using light from a single input fiber. We demonstrate the real-time monitoring of antibody-antigen reactions using complementary and mismatched immunoglobulin G receptor-analyte pairs and bovine serum albumin. The measured level of detection for each sensor element corresponds to a surface coverage of less than 0.3 pg/mm(2).


Optics Letters | 2010

Refractive index engineering with subwavelength gratings for efficient microphotonic couplers and planar waveguide multiplexers

Pavel Cheben; Przemek J. Bock; Jens H. Schmid; J. Lapointe; Siegfried Janz; Dan-Xia Xu; A. Densmore; André Delâge; B. Lamontagne; Trevor J. Hall

We use subwavelength gratings (SWGs) to engineer the refractive index in microphotonic waveguides, including practical components such as input couplers and multiplexer circuits. This technique allows for direct control of the mode confinement by changing the refractive index of a waveguide core over a range as broad as 1.6-3.5 by lithographic patterning. We demonstrate two experimental examples of refractive index engineering, namely, a microphotonic fiber-chip coupler with a coupling loss as small as -0.9dB and minimal wavelength dependence and a planar waveguide multiplexer with SWG nanostructure, which acts as a slab waveguide for light diffracted by the grating, while at the same time acting as a lateral cladding for the strip waveguide. This yields an operation bandwidth of 170nm for a device size of only approximately 160microm x100microm.


Optics Express | 2007

A high-resolution silicon-on-insulator arrayed waveguide grating microspectrometer with sub-micrometer aperture waveguides.

Pavel Cheben; Jens H. Schmid; André Delâge; A. Densmore; Siegfried Janz; B. Lamontagne; J. Lapointe; E. Post; P. Waldron; D.-X. Xu

We demonstrate a 50-channel high-resolution arrayed waveguide grating microspectrometer with a 0.2 nm channel spacing on a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform. The chip size is 8 mm x 8 mm. High channel density and spectral resolution are achieved using high aspect ratio 0.6 mum x 1.5 mum waveguide apertures to inject the light into the input combiner and to intercept different spectral channels at the output combiner focal region. The measured crosstalk is <-10 dB, the 3 dB channel bandwidth is 0.15 nm, and the insertion loss is -17 dB near the central wavelength of lambda = 1.545 mum.


Optics Express | 2010

Subwavelength grating periodic structures in silicon-on-insulator: a new type of microphotonic waveguide

Przemek J. Bock; Pavel Cheben; Jens H. Schmid; J. Lapointe; André Delâge; Siegfried Janz; Geof C. Aers; Dan-Xia Xu; A. Densmore; Trevor J. Hall

We report on the experimental demonstration and analysis of a new waveguide principle using subwavelength gratings. Unlike other periodic waveguides such as line-defects in a 2D photonic crystal lattice, a subwavelength grating waveguide confines the light as a conventional index-guided structure and does not exhibit optically resonant behaviour. Subwavelength grating waveguides in silicon-on-insulator are fabricated with a single etch step and allow for flexible control of the effective refractive index of the waveguide core simply by lithographic patterning. Experimental measurements indicate a propagation loss as low as 2.1 dB/cm for subwavelength grating waveguides with negligible polarization and wavelength dependent loss, which compares favourably to conventional microphotonic silicon waveguides. The measured group index is nearly constant n(g) ~1.5 over a wavelength range exceeding the telecom C-band.


Optics Express | 2010

Subwavelength grating crossings for silicon wire waveguides

Przemek J. Bock; Pavel Cheben; Jens H. Schmid; J. Lapointe; André Delâge; Dan-Xia Xu; Siegfried Janz; A. Densmore; Trevor J. Hall

We report on the design, simulation and experimental demonstration of a new type of waveguide crossing based on subwavelength gratings in silicon waveguides. We used 3D finite-difference time-domain simulations to minimize loss, crosstalk and polarization dependence. Measurement of fabricated devices show that our waveguide crossings have a loss as low as -0.023 dB/crossing, polarization dependent loss of < 0.02 dB and crosstalk <-40 dB.


Optics Letters | 2010

Continuously apodized fiber-to-chip surface grating coupler with refractive index engineered subwavelength structure

Robert Halir; Pavel Cheben; Jens H. Schmid; R. Ma; D. Bedard; Siegfried Janz; D.-X. Xu; A. Densmore; J. Lapointe; I. Molina-Fernandez

We demonstrate a fully etched, continuously apodized fiber-to-chip surface grating coupler for the first time (to our knowledge). The device is fabricated in a single-etch step and operates with TM-polarized light, achieving a coupling efficiency of 3.7 dB and a 3 dB bandwidth of 60 nm. A subwavelength microstructure is employed to generate an effective medium engineered to vary the strength of the grating and thereby maximize coupling efficiency, while mitigating backreflections at the same time. Minimum feature size is 100 nm for compatibility with deep-UV 193 nm lithography.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Stability Diagram of a Few-Electron Triple Dot

Louis Gaudreau; S. A. Studenikin; A. S. Sachrajda; P. Zawadzki; A. Kam; J. Lapointe; Marek Korkusinski; Pawel Hawrylak

Individual and coupled quantum dots containing one or two electrons have been realized and are regarded as components for future quantum information circuits. In this Letter we map out experimentally the stability diagram of the few-electron triple dot system, the electron configuration map as a function of the external tuning parameters, and reveal experimentally for the first time the existence of quadruple points, a signature of the three dots being in resonance. In the vicinity of these quadruple points we observe a duplication of charge transfer transitions related to charge and spin reconfigurations triggered by changes in the total electron occupation number. The experimental results are largely reproduced by equivalent circuit analysis and Hubbard models. Our results are relevant for future quantum mechanical engineering applications within both quantum information and quantum cellular automata architectures.


Optics Letters | 2008

Spiral-path high-sensitivity silicon photonic wire molecular sensor with temperature-independent response

A. Densmore; D.-X. Xu; Siegfried Janz; P. Waldron; T. Mischki; Gregory P. Lopinski; André Delâge; J. Lapointe; Pavel Cheben; B. Lamontagne; Jens H. Schmid

We demonstrate a new silicon photonic wire waveguide evanescent field (PWEF) sensor that exploits the strong evanescent field of the transverse magnetic mode of this high-index-contrast, submicrometer-dimension waveguide. High sensitivity is achieved by using a 2 mm long double-spiral waveguide structure that fits within a compact circular area of 150 microm diameter, facilitating compatibility with commercial spotting apparatus and the fabrication of densely spaced sensor arrays. By incorporating the PWEF sensor element into a balanced waveguide Mach-Zehnder interferometer circuit, a minimum detectable mass of approximately 10 fg of streptavidin protein is demonstrated with near temperature-independent response.

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Siegfried Janz

National Research Council

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Jens H. Schmid

National Research Council

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Pavel Cheben

National Research Council

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A. Densmore

National Research Council

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D.-X. Xu

National Research Council

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Dan-Xia Xu

National Research Council

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B. Lamontagne

National Research Council

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P. J. Poole

National Research Council

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André Delâge

National Research Council

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Dan Dalacu

National Research Council

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