Inverse-Designed Tellurite Devices for Polarization Control

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Tellurite glasses are of high interest in integrated photonics for sensing and, in particular, telecommunications applications, where they serve as key materials for amplification and mid-IR light sources due to their wide transparent window, thermal and mechanical stability, and high optical nonlinearity. In this work, we present two inverse-designed devices for polarization management on a tellurium dioxide platform: a TM-pass polarizer and a polarization beam splitter. The TM-pass polarizer achieves an average simulated transmission efficiency of −0.6 dB and an polarization crosstalk below −20.9 dB across the entire C-band, with a footprint of only 24 μm × 6 μm. The polarizationbeam splitter has an ultra-compact footprint of 28 μm × 6 μmand achieves average TE and TM transmission efficiencies ofapproximately −0.4 dB, with crosstalk below −18.3 dB and−27.2 dB, respectively. These are the first freeform devicesdemonstrated on a tellurium dioxide platform, exhibiting strongrobustness to fabrication variations and showcasing the versatilityof the platform beyond nonlinear applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)422-425
Number of pages4
JournalIEEE Photonics Technology Letters
Volume38
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2026

!!!Keywords

  • integrated optics
  • polarization control
  • Tellurite photonics

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Inverse-Designed Tellurite Devices for Polarization Control'. These topics are generated from the title and abstract of the publication. Together, they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this