Papers Published
Abstract:
We demonstrate an integrated evanescent-field multimode Mach-Zehnder interferometric chemical-biological sensor, fabricated on silicon, with sensitivity of parts per 109 achieved by modal pattern tracking and analysis. This sensor is fully compatible with the fabrication constraints of the silicon-complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (Si-CMOS) process. Furthermore, using the separately measured ellipsometric response together with the mass uptake of agent by the polymer sensing layer, we validate sensor performance via simulation and measure an absolute index sensitivity of 2.5 × 10-6. We then extend this to a fully integrated chemical-biological sensor by considering the fundamental noise performance of CMOS detectors. We find that relatively short, less than or equal 5000 μm long, interferometric sensing elements, with modal pattern analysis, allow fully integrated optical sensors on Si-CMOS (assuming a 2.8 μm pixel pitch) with an index sensitivity of [similar to] 9.2 × 10-7 and a corresponding concentration sensitivity of [similar to] 170 parts per 109 for methanol in N2. © 2006 Optical Society of America.
Keywords:
Interferometers;Multimode fibers;Integrated optics;CMOS integrated circuits;Chemical sensors;Optical variables measurement;Modulation;Sensitivity analysis;