1. Introduction
Integrated biological and chemical sensors permit the label-free detection of analytes by the evanescent field sensing of changes in the refractive index of the waveguide surrounding medium that, in turn, modify the guided mode effective index [
1,
2,
3]. Microring structures fabricated in CMOS-integrated silicon photonics platforms are particularly appealing, since the resonance effect permits the enhancement of the sensitivity of reduced footprint devices.
Amongst the CMOS-compatible photonics integration platforms, silicon nitride is an attractive option for the implementation of optical biosensors [
4,
5,
6] because of several advantages over the more extensively used silicon platform: it has a lower intrinsic linear propagation loss, its large band gap results both in the absence of nonlinear loss due two-photon absorption and in transparency in the visible and NIR spectral regions and, also, its reduced thermo-optic coefficient provides better stability against temperature fluctuations. Furthermore, the silicon nitride platform is not only compatible with CMOS fabrication processes, but also most of the surface functionalization protocols [
5].
The refractive index of silicon nitride is relatively large, but smaller than that of silicon. A lower refractive index in the integrated waveguide core means that a poorer field confinement is obtained. The reduced field confinement results in a larger sensitivity to refractive index variations of the cladding that can be very interesting for sensing applications. On the other hand, the effect of radiation losses due to the waveguide curvature becomes more pronounced and, consequently, the bent radii have to be increased in relation to those of silicon integrated circuits in order to obtain low losses and sharp resonances. In [
7,
8,
9], the use of asymmetric coupled waveguides for the reduction of radiation losses in curved structures and its application to the enhancement of the intrinsic Q-factor of racetrack micro-resonators was studied in depth. These guiding geometries have been proven particularly useful for the reduction of the footprint of silicon nitride devices. Furthermore, the acute differential losses for TE and TM polarizations in these structures have been exploited in the fabrication of ultracompact integrated polarizers [
10,
11].
The sharpening of the resonant response in symmetric coupled microrings have previously been noted in [
12] and studied using a coupled-resonator model. Biosensors based on concentric microresonators in the symmetric case were analyzed in [
13,
14,
15]. Whereas the coupled-resonator model is necessary for describing the operation of nonconcentric rings [
16,
17], the modal method used in [
8,
9,
10,
11] provides a more direct approach in concentric arrangements. This technique provides a very large degree of accuracy, necessary in the design of devices to be incorporated in fabricated photonic chips [
9,
11], at a low computational cost. These combined features permit the optimization of more general asymmetric structures not previously addressed. At the same time, the effect of propagation losses due to absorption in the aqueous cladding can be easily incorporated to the analysis. Biosensors based on pulley-type resonators have also been studied in [
18]. These structures permit the reduction of radiation losses by wrapping the ring with the access waveguide. Nevertheless, coupling and radiation reduction properties become entangled, which complicates the optimization of the structures.
In this work, we present a thorough analysis of the properties of optical biosensors built using asymmetric concentric double-ring structures. Following our previous works on racetrack microresonators [
7,
8,
9], we seek to exploit the radiation-quenching properties of the exterior waveguide leading to solutions clearly distinct from those of symmetric structures. The mechanism employed is based on the impact of an asymmetric coupled waveguide on the mode field distribution of a curved dielectric channel. When the field distribution in the proposed geometry is compared to that of the isolated main waveguide, we observe the existence of specific values of the design parameters that provide an improved confinement of the optical field inside the main waveguide. In these cases, the exterior waveguide acts as an efficient shielding against the effects of radiation. It is noteworthy that the best-case solutions rest in broad regions in the optimization parameter plane where performance variations are smooth, resulting in designs that are resilient against fabrication tolerances [
9,
10,
11].
2. Fundamentals
There are two distinct operation mechanisms that can be employed for the evanescent sensing of the surrounding medium using microring resonators [
1]. In homogeneous sensing devices, a variation of the concentration of a biochemical analyte produces a modification of the refractive index of the cover medium. In the surface-sensing mechanism, on the other hand, the refractive index change results from the modification of the receptor molecules localized at a functionalized ultrathin layer at the microring interface. The modeling of surface sensing is highly dependent on the properties of each specific application. For the sake of generality, in this work, we focus on the homogeneous sensing case for the systematic analysis of the properties of concentric asymmetric microring resonators label-free biosensors. The most general conclusions of the analysis are expected to apply as well, when extrapolated to surface-sensing devices.
Figure 1 displays the geometry of the silicon nitride microring sensors analyzed in this work. The
rectangular waveguides lie on top of a
layer grown over the silicon wafer. The microring is placed at the sensing region, within a trench opened in the top
cover so as to be accessible to the analyte in an aqueous solution delivered to the sensor through a microfluidic arrangement. The reference cover medium is water and our analyses include the effect of the absorption in the sensor surrounding medium. We use the waveguide geometry of [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11], typical of the silicon nitride platform. The height
h (see
Figure 2) of the silicon nitride waveguides takes as fixed value of 300 nm and the width of the inner microring waveguide will always be 1 μm. In the following, we call this optical channel the main waveguide of the system. The design parameters that we vary in order to optimize our structures are the width of the outermost waveguide
, the waveguide separation
s, and the radius of the curvature
R measured at the center at the innermost waveguide. For the calculations, we use the same values for the bulk refractive indices at
nm of
,
, and
,
, as in [
9,
11], and we set the refractive index and extinction coefficient of water as
and
, respectively [
19].
Figure 1 also shows an access straight waveguide that is part of the sensor readout optical circuit and that is coupled to the microresonator at a minimum distance point with gap separation
g. There are two possible arrangements [
20]: side or vertical coupling, illustrated in panels
a and
b of
Figure 1, respectively. In either case, parameter
g determines the coupling coefficient
t [
2]. This coupling coefficient is most relevant to the overall system response, and together with the internal propagation loss, determines the Q-factor of the resonator [
2]. There are pros and cons to each of the two coupling arrangements of
Figure 1 [
20], but some of the advantages of vertical coupling are particularly outstanding when microrings are used in biosensing applications. First, it permits an efficient coupling between the access and the main ring waveguides that exploits in an effective manner the radiation-quenching mechanism described in [
7,
8,
9]. Furthermore, the changes in the cover medium during the sensor operation would affect the coupling properties in a side-coupled structure making the analysis more complex and introducing an additional variable to the optimization design. We seek low intrinsic loss configurations preserving the phase matching to the access waveguide in a lossy cover medium. In this case, using a vertical coupling approach permits us to consider that coupling conditions are essentially unaffected by the other system parameters and to focus on the propagation properties of the modal fields in the structure for the optimization of the devices. Furthermore, the analysis presented in this work, focused on the propagation properties intrinsic to the microring structure, remains equally valid in the case of alternative conformations such as an add-drop configuration [
3], which is also commonly found in this type of sensors and permits the design of more elaborate sensing systems [
6].
Nonconcentric double (or multiple) ring structures [
16,
17] are well-suited to a coupled resonator analysis [
12,
17] but a design oriented toward device fabrication requires more involved numerical techniques for the solution of the full 3D vector Maxwell equations in arbitrary guiding geometries, such as FDTD [
21], in order to fulfill the accuracy specifications. On the other hand, concentric structures, either symmetric or asymmetric, are most efficiently studied using highly accurate modal techniques. We base our numerical investigations on a finite-difference scheme valid for curved waveguiding structures [
22], implemented in the WGMS3D software package [
23] that permits the inclusion of lossy materials in the guiding geometry. This allows us to take into consideration the effect of the water propagation loss. This highly relevant effect is most often ignored in the analyses.
The way the propagation characteristics change when the design parameters are modified are best understood if we start by analyzing the straight (
) asymmetric coupled waveguides displayed in
Figure 2. The values of the effective indices of the modes guided in the structure as a function of
and
s are depicted in
Figure 3 for the TE-polarized solutions. The line
defines a straight symmetric coupler. For large waveguide separation
, and
, the system supports two degenerate modes each of them localized at one of the waveguides. As
s decreases and the two identical waveguides come closer together, the mode coupling becomes stronger and the degeneracy disappears: the coupler now supports two (super) modes, with respective odd and even symmetry, and with distinct effective indices; the differences in the effective indices grow as
s becomes smaller. The effective indices of these two modes can be continued in the (
,
s) plane and they define two respective noncrossing sheets. As one moves out of the
line, in the asymmetric case, and for sufficient waveguide separation
s, there exists a broad region lying close to the
plane (with
the effective index of the isolated main waveguide) at both sides of the
boundary for each of the two modes. In either case, the mode whose
sheet is in close proximity to the
plane has its energy predominantly confined in the main waveguide. As
is further increased, we can observe that a third mode emerges, and becomes the one that is mainly confined in the main waveguide for larger values of
. For each value of
and
s, we call the principal mode the one that has an effective index closest to that of the single waveguide structure. As the difference between these two values becomes smaller, the mode confinement in the main waveguide becomes progressively tighter. The transverse electric field strength amplitude for three principal modes at each of the modal sheets of
Figure 3 are illustrated in
Figure 4. In all three cases, we observe that the solution is highly localized at the main waveguide of the structure. The properties of these solutions are in high contrast with those of a symmetric coupler, where the modal fields of the two modes supported are equally distributed between the two waveguides.
When a dielectric waveguide is bent to a finite radius
R, forming a ring structure, the modal solutions transform into quasi-modes with complex propagation constants that reflect the presence of losses due to radiation [
24]. In the following, we will also refer to the real part of the complex effective index of the mode
as effective index.
Figure 5 illustrates the impact on the TE modal effective indices when the straight geometry of
Figure 2 is bent to a radius of
R = 50 μm. First, there is a shift of the effective index in the curved isolated main waveguide. This reflects in a corresponding shift of the flat support of the modal solution predominantly confined in the main waveguide for each value of
and
s (principal mode) [
11]. At the same time there is a clear distortion of the boundaries separating the regions at which each modal sheet is tangent to the single waveguide flat support. This reflects the effective deformation of the waveguide index profile along the radial direction induced by the curvature [
24].
Within the domains where the modal sheets become nearly tangent to the isolated main waveguide support, one finds that the modal field distribution experiences a lesser coupling to the radiation tail, resulting in regions with reduced radiation losses [
7,
8,
9] and our target will be the optimal solutions, in the sense of the lowest radiation loss, lying in these domains. These optimal solutions are out of reach in a symmetric concentric ring design, where the value of
would take a fixed value of
μm. The properties of the distribution of the electric field strength amplitude of the principal mode solutions are illustrated in
Figure 6. The high degree of confinement of these solutions in the principal inner ring permit us to obtain a design with an optimal reduction of the radiation loss, and largely improved performance in relation to that of a single-ring structure.
It is noteworthy that when
Figure 3 and
Figure 5 are compared, one observes, for
R = 50 μm, a bifurcation of the boundary close to
μm and the emergence of a new modal solution.
Figure 7 displays, for a separation of
μm, the respective transverse electric field strength distributions of two modes belonging to the third and fourth sheets of
Figure 5 that bifurcate, due to the waveguide bending, from the third sheet of
Figure 3. For this smaller value of
s, the deviation of the effective indices relative to that of the mode in the uncoupled main waveguide is larger, the modal field is less confined inside the main waveguide, and the details of the field distributions over the outer waveguide can be clearly distinguished. We can see that the field distributions of the two bifurcated modes are, in fact, very similar, even though they differ in the number of nulls inside the outer waveguide core, a clear signature of having a different mode order.
In a ring microresonator, resonances appear at each wavelength where the round-trip phase accumulated by the propagating optical field is an integer multiple of
, that is,
where
. The frequency separation between resonances (free spectral range) is inversely proportional to
R. The shape of the resonances is determined both from round-trip signal attenuation, defining the round-trip amplitude factor
, the coupling coefficient
t between the access waveguide and the resonator, and it is best captured in the Q-factor [
2]
with
, assuming an ideal (lossless) coupling.
is the group index
Similar results apply in the case of a two-coupler add-drop configuration, with
assuming identical values of coefficient
R characterizing both couplings.
The operation of the biosensor requires the determination of a spectral shift in the filter response produced by a change in the refractive index of the cover medium. Under typical operation conditions, the mode effective index, and therefore the resonance wavelength, displays a linear variation with the refractive index of the cover medium. Thus, we evaluate the sensitivity
of the device by introducing a small change
in the refractive index of water. This procedure is in line with related studies, e.g., [
18]. In the following, we will also assume that
nm.
The readout of the sensor output requires an accurate determination of the resonance wavelength in the presence of noise. The performance of the algorithms employed for this task improve as the dip at resonance becomes more acute [
5]. The full width at half-maximum (FWHM) spectral width of the resonance line is directly related to the
Q factor [
2] as
and so the detection efficiency increases with the value of
Q. In Equation (
4), the value of
R can be arbitrarily tailored as part of the design process.
a is a more delicate parameter that depends on the mode propagation properties and it is a limiting factor for the accessible values of
Q. Therefore, our optimization strategy will focus on the value of
a in order to maximize the
Q factor by effectively quenching the radiated field.