Triplex
Triplex
adds to the attractiveness of integrated photonic solu-                   of requirements for all photonic applications. Therefore,
tions [14, 15]. Nowadays, waveguide-based optical sensors                 the integration of complementary technologies is often
reach the detection limit of 10-7/refractive index unit (RIU)             pursued.
[14], which covers most interesting applications. Current                      At present, three technology platforms are commer-
research focuses on creating sensor arrays and cost price                 cially available in multi-project wafer (MPW) runs: the
reduction by further miniaturization [16]. Recent progress                III-V InP technology, silicon photonics, and the TriPleX
in miniaturization of spectrometers for Raman detection                   platform. Customers have access to a library contain-
and optical coherence tomography (OCT) [17–19] demon-                     ing basic building blocks, allowing complex functional
strates the potential of photonics technology for point-of-               designs. Several design houses [22, 23] support these plat-
care diagnostics. The requirements and technology needs                   forms. Fabrication facilities for these platforms are avail-
for these application fields are, however, hard to gener-                 able: InP [24–27], silicon (Si) photonics [28–30], TriPleX
alize. The applicable wavelengths, for example, cover the                 [31–33]. The key property performances of these technolo-
spectrum of light ranging from UV-VIS for environmen-                     gies are summarized in Figure 2.
tal monitoring and absorption spectroscopy, from VIS to                        As indicated in Figure 2, the InP technology is applied
near-IR for clinical investigation techniques such as Raman               in the full range of active functionalities yielding a large
spectroscopy and OCT, up to the mid-IR for gas sensing                    variety of photonic applications, such as laser (array)s,
and space exploration (wavelength ranges based on                         (fast) modulators, and detectors. Si-photonics and TriPleX
astronomy division and sensor response division schemes                   are both silicon based and can, therefore, rely on CMOS-
as addressed in [20] and references therein). Adding active               compatible fabrication technology enabling low-cost
functions (light sources, detectors, switches, etc.), micro-              volume manufacturing [11]. Silicon photonics has com-
fluidic components, and/or nonreciprocal elements such                    bined its passive platform with significant progress in
as circulators increases the functional and technological                 the realization of on-chip detectors and modulators. Most
complexity beyond the integration of passive circuitry.                   applications can be found in datacom [35]. TriPleX has
Therefore, one of the main challenges remains to be the                   focused on passive performance (i.e., no on-chip gain
access to cost-efficient (hybrid) assembly and packaging                  media or high-frequency tuning) with ultralow loss over a
techniques.                                                               wide wavelength range including the visible range down
     Materials and technologies applied in integrated                     to near UV. TriPleX is widely applied for microwave pho-
optics research and development vary over a wide range,                   tonics, sensors, and visible light applications [36, 37].
e.g., doped silica, polymers, silicon-on-insulator, III-V                      For all three platforms, tight curvature of waveguide
semiconductors, chalcogenides, lithium niobate and                        bends enabling cascading of multiple structures and
dielectric materials such as Si3N4 or Al2O3. In Figure 1, a               reduction of optical footprint is mandatory. Therefore, a
(non-exclusive) overview of known optical materials is                    large refractive index contrast between waveguide core
given, showing their applicability as function of wave-                   and cladding is needed. On the other hand, very efficient
length. Although many material systems have been suc-                     coupling to low-contrast optical fibers has to be accom-
cessfully applied in some of the application fields, none                 plished implying completely opposite requirements on the
of the technologies is capable to fulfill the complete set                index contrast of the channel waveguide. For the TriPleX
Figure 1: Overview on various materials applied in integrated optics and their corresponding transparency ranges [21].
                                                              K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform   191
Figure 2: Qualitative performance comparison of the three commercially available technology platforms [34].
platform, a monolithic spotsize converter technology                  commercially available basic waveguide geometries,
has been developed. This technology allows for on-chip                which can be obtained by modification of individual
modal field size conversion and, therefore, enables highly            steps in the generic fabrication flow [42]. The geometries
efficient fiber-to-chip coupling over the full accessible             are categorized by their shape: box shell (I), double stripe
wavelength range while maintaining a large flexibility in             (II), and filled box (III), whereas type II is subdivided into
waveguide geometry being inherent to the TriPleX pho-                 the symmetric double stripe (IIa), the asymmetric double
tonic platform.                                                       stripe (IIc), and the single stripe (IIb) being a special
     In this paper, we provide a comprehensive review on              case of IIc. The schematic layouts of the geometries and
the TriPleX photonic waveguide platform. In Section 2,                SEM micrographs of realized structures are depicted in
the properties, technological and design aspects will be              Figure 3. The generic process flow covering the fabrica-
discussed with emphasis on the different commercialized               tion steps of all TriPleX types is given in Figure 4.
TriPleX geometries, integration aspects, fabrication con-                   While the overall geometrical dimensions of the
cepts, and basic building blocks. Section 3 will focus on             waveguide cores of these shapes are typically in the order
the applications and performance of TriPleX-based com-                of 1 μm2, their waveguide characteristics and potential
ponents for communications, biomedicine, and sensing                  application areas differ greatly. Some key characteristics
as well as a few special fields of photonics.                         are effective index of the waveguide mode Neff and group
                                                                      index Ng (for TE-polarized light), channel propagation
                                                                      loss αch [dB/cm], polarization-dependent loss PDL [dB],
2 TriPleX photonic platform                                           minimum bending radius Rb [μm], mode field diam-
                                                                      eter MFD [μm] (TE00 mode), fiber-chip coupling loss αf-c
                                                                      [dB/facet], and waveguide birefringence ΔNeff.
2.1 TriPleX technology and design                                           The box shell layout is highly suited for telecom appli-
                                                                      cations: due to its symmetrical shape, the polarization
TriPleX waveguide technology is based on alternating                  dependence is largely reduced [43]. The box shell is availa-
well-defined and highly stable silicon oxide (SiO2) and               ble in a low [39] and high [44] index contrast variant based
silicon nitride (Si3N4) layers [38, 39]. The CMOS-compat-             on different ratios of the Si3N4 and SiO2 thicknesses in the
ible fabrication equipment based on batch processing by               core region. In the low contrast version, a 1 × 1-μm2 SiO2
low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) enables                core is surrounded by 50-nm-thick Si3N4, while the high
volume production as well as good reproducibility [32,                contrast is achieved with SiO2 and Si3N4 core dimensions
40]. TriPleX waveguides are transparent for wavelengths               of 0.5 × 0.5 μm2 and 170 nm, respectively. The waveguide
from 0.4 up to 2.35 μm and exhibit very low optical propa-            propagation loss of the high-contrast box shell geometry
gation losses. This technology combines good integration              is below 0.2 dB/cm and reduces to 0.06 dB/cm for the
potential with high design flexibility allowing for tailor-           low-contrast variant [45]. The main difference in the char-
ing of the waveguide properties [41]. We distinguish three            acteristics of both versions can be found in the bending
192         K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform
Figure 3: Schematic layout of the TriPleX geometries and SEM images of realized structures: box shell (I), symmetric double-strip (IIa),
single stripe (IIb), a-symmetric double stripe (IIc), filled box (III).
radius, which is designed to fulfill the 0.01 dB/cm bend                  wavelength and the group index are 1.535 and 1.72, respec-
loss criterion, and the mode field diameter of the circular               tively, while the waveguide birefringence is 5.3 × 10-2. The
mode shape: Rb = 500 μm, MFD = 3.6 μm (low contrast), and                 waveguide attenuation is ≤ 0.1 dB/cm [46]. The tight
Rb = 150 μm, MFD = 1.4 μm (high contrast).                                bending radius allows for functional complexity at VLSI
     The symmetric double stripe layout is typically                      level. As shown in Figure 5, waveguide propagation loss
applied in components requiring tight bending radii and                   as low as 0.095 dB/cm was measured in optical ring res-
large polarization birefringence. The optimized geom-                     onator (ORR) structures with a bending radius down to
etry is composed of two 170-nm-thick and 1.2-μm-wide                      70 μm [46]. The circular mode of this waveguide geom-
Si3N4 layers separated by a 500-nm-thick SiO2 interlayer.                 etry has a mode field diameter of ∼1.5 μm. To enable low-
The effective index of the waveguide mode at 1.55 μm                      loss coupling to standard single-mode fibers (SMF28),
                                                                K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform   193
Figure 5: Waveguide propagation loss as function of ORR bending radius (inset: measurement and fit of ORR frequency responses) [46].
multimode, and an additional tapering section is required                 trench etching (into the thermal oxide layer) and trench
for adiabatic widening of the channel width [51].                         filling (by LPCVD Si3N4 deposition) in combination with
     Finally, the filled-box geometry was developed for                   chemical mechanical polishing (CMP) was applied for the
applications requiring ultrahigh confinement of the                       fabrication of crack-free waveguides (see also Figure 4).
modal field in the core layer. In this geometry, core widths              The optical propagation loss of these waveguides at 1.55
of 0.8–1.0 μm and thicknesses varying from 0.8 to 1.2 μm                  μm wavelength was 0.4 dB/cm [53].
were realized [53]. The waveguide channel is multimodal;
up to three modes exist. For the 1.55-μm wavelength and
TE-polarized light, the corresponding effective index of
                                                                          2.2 Technology integration aspects
the mode and MFD of the fundamental mode (TE00) are
around 1.79 and 1 μm, respectively. A minimum bending
                                                                          The high design flexibility provided by the TriPleX plat-
radius of 12.5 μm was calculated for the TE00 mode taking
                                                                          form is prerequisite to boost photonic integration. The
the 0.01 dB/cm loss criterion into account. As stoichio-
                                                                          availability of low- and high-contrast regions on a single
metric LPCVD Si3N4 films exhibit high tensile stress, the
                                                                          chip easily enables interposer functionality in photonic
layer thickness growth is limited to < 500 nm. Therefore,
                                                                          assemblies. The large freedom in pitch and spotsize con-
                                                                          version is, for example, utilized in low-loss connections
                                                                          between optical fiber arrays and high-confinement wave-
                                                                          guide technologies such as InP or silicon on insulator
                                                                          (SOI) [54]. In return, active functionality (light generation,
                                                                          detection, and modulation) available on those platforms
                                                                          is efficiently joined with the TriPleX circuitry. Various
                                                                          complementary functionalities such as high-Q resona-
                                                                          tors, arrayed waveguide gratings, tunable delay lines, and
                                                                          devices for polarization control available in the ultralow
                                                                          loss silicon nitride waveguide technology and in silicon
                                                                          photonics are reviewed [55, 56]. On the SOI side among
                                                                          others, modules based on hybrid integration with the
                                                                          III-V InP technology and magneto-optical materials add
                                                                          to the functionality portfolio. The proposed integration
Figure 6: Red light propagation in a high-aspect ratio spiral-shaped      concepts for silicon nitride waveguides with the silicon
waveguide with minimum bending radius of 165 μm [51].                     photonic platform are based on a hybrid bonding process
                                                                 K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform       195
utilizing an SiO2 interface layer with a controlled thickness            controlled by design rather than solely by the process-
[57, 58]. The integration concept and an SEM micrograph                  specific etch profile [60]. The preliminary results based on
of a fabricated device are shown in Figure 7.                            insertion loss measurements of waveguides with multiple
     Currently, a novel assembly concept for integrating                 tapering sections indicate a taper loss reduction by about
InP and TriPleX chips on a carrier platform is being devel-              one order of magnitude.
oped by a European consortium: PHASTFlex [59]. Besides                        Last but not the least, the TriPleX platform is also
addressing low-cost, high-volume assembly, the approach                  well suited for lab-on-a-chip applications. Manufactur-
focuses on bridging the gap between typical flip-chip                    able concepts (Figure 8) for the integration of microflu-
placement accuracies ( ≤ 1 μm) and the sub-100-nm align-                 idic systems as well as the assembly of VCSEL arrays and
ment precision required by high-contrast coupling inter-                 detectors have been developed [42, 61].
faces by monolithically integrated MEMS-based fine
tuning.
     On-chip adiabatic tapering sections are key elements                2.3 Technology access
for many integration aspects. Therefore, the optimization
of the taper design and technology was emphasized. Verti-                Low-threshold access to the TriPleX platform is, among
cal tapers are usually fabricated by standard lithography                others, enabled through MPW services [62]. The MPW
and isotropic etching of the silicon nitride layers. Meas-               approach provides a solution for researchers and entre-
urements of propagation losses through such tapering                     preneurs to prototype their design at affordable cost and
sections resulted in ≤ 0.5 dB/taper [47]. The most critical              time levels. The designs of several participants are inte-
part of the tapering path is at the starting position of the             grated on a single mask and fabricated in a shuttle run.
taper (thin side), where the propagation of the weakly con-              Circuitry simulation and mask design can be carried out
fined mode is extremely sensitive to geometrical changes.                by PhoeniX software tools [22]. A prerequisite to the suc-
Therefore, LioniX has developed a novel ultrataper pro-                  cessful implementation of such an approach is the avail-
cedure, in which the shape of the tapering section can be                ability of well-defined and verified design elements.
Fluidic wafer
                                                                                                   Optical wafer
                                                                                                                                           A
Therefore, a library of standard optical components was                 Light coupling to the toroidal cavities is usually real-
established and implemented as basic building blocks                    ized through tapered fibers because on-chip integration
(BBBs) in the licensed design kit of the PhoeniX software.              of access waveguides is challenging. The integration of
In the past MPW services, components for the box shell                  high-Q ring resonators in the ultralow-loss TriPleX plat-
geometry were applied, while in currently active MPW                    form is an attractive approach, as access waveguides,
calls, the double-stripe geometry is offered. The BBB                   cavities, and directional couplers can be monolithi-
libraries include the following main elements: waveguide                cally integrated. In the TriPleX single stripe geometry
straight, bent waveguide, Y-junction, directional coupler,              (40 nm × 11 μm), add-drop ring resonators, with a 9.65-mm
spotsize converter, and heater section. This allows for the             bending radius and a 3.3-GHz FSR at 1580 nm wavelength,
easy design of integrated functions such as interposers,                have been integrated [65, 66]. Several directional coupler
microring resonators (MRRs), several types of interfer-                 concepts (symmetric, straight, pulley, and tapered) have
ometers (multimode, Michelson, Young, Mach-Zehnder),                    been implemented to assess and minimize the coupler
arrayed waveguide gratings, multiplexers, frequency, and                excess loss. An intrinsic Q-factor of 0.81 × 108 was meas-
modal filters, mode and polarization converters as well                 ured with a weakly tapered directional coupler design.
as implementation of thermo-optic tuning or sensing                     Round trip and propagation losses of 0.019 dB and
windows. The library kit for the asymmetric stripe geom-                0.0032 dB/cm were extracted, respectively. Upon further
etry is under preparation.                                              coupler optimization and full exploitation of the low-loss
     TriPleX services as well as its combination with other             TriPleX platform (i.e., αch < 0.0005 dB/cm) Q-factors as
photonic platforms and technologies are also available                  high as 6 × 108 are predicted.
through the European initiative ACTPHAST [63], which                        A range of ring resonators suited for application
has created a unique one-stop-shop European access                      over a wide wavelength range (1060, 1310 and 1550 nm)
center for photonics innovation solutions and technology                was studied in [67]. Based on single-mode TE propaga-
support.                                                                tion in two different TriPleX single stripe geometries
                                                                        (50 nm × 5.3 μm and 80 nm × 2.8 μm with bending radii of
                                                                        5 and 2 mm, respectively), Q-factors of 19, 28, 7 × 106 were
3.2 Biophotonics
                                                                                                        Reference arm
                                                                        SLED      Polarization                       Collimating
                                                                                                      Fiber array
                                                                                   controller                           lens         Sample
                                                                        Power
                                                                        monitor
                                                                                                                                       X-Y
                                                                                                                                   Galvo scanner
                                                              A        Spectrometer               Integrated interferometer chip
                                                                                                                                               A
                                                                                  Integrated interferometer chip              Scan lens
                                                                              Fiber
                                                                              array
                                                              B
Collimating lens B
                                                                      Figure 13: Schematic layout of the OCT setup with the integrated
                                                                      TriPleX-based interferometer chip (A) and photograph of test setup
                                                                      with fiber array, integrated interferometer chip and scan lens (B) [45].
Figure 15: Photograph of Hyperion laser light engine [37]: modular interior with TriPleX LCB chip in blue pig-tailed package (A) and commer-
cial product with software in action (courtesy XiO photonics) (B).
stripe TriPleX geometry with 35 nm and 85 nm lower and                     Absorption sensing: TriPleX-based chips have been
upper silicon nitride layer thickness, respectively [94].              designed and realized for a range of absorption-based
Challenges with respect to power budget aspects in mul-                applications in fluidic environments.
tichannel operations are addressed by a grating-based                      The development of processes in a microreactor
vertical VCSEL coupling concept in combination with an                 largely benefits from integrated UV/VIS spectroscopic
optimized 1 × 8 multimode interference (MMI) coupler.                  detection allowing for real-time analysis under segmented
                                                                       flow. An optofluidic chip optimized for evanescent field
                                                                       sensing based on a 65-nm-thick Si3N4 waveguide layer and
        Gas/liquid specific absorption window:                         an operational wavelength range from 488 to 632 nm was
                        Interaction length (L)                         developed for the monitoring of gold nanoparticle produc-
                             Evanescent tail                           tion [61]. Segmented flow detection at integration times as
                                                                       low as 2 ms was demonstrated.
                                                        Cover nc
                                                                           Fluorescence sensing: A sensitive and low-cost
                                      Waveguiding film nf              detection scheme for molecular biomarkers has been
                                                                       demonstrated [95, 96] in TriPleX chips of 10 mm × 10 mm.
                                          Bottom cladding nb
                                                                       One of the applied chip layouts yielding a matrix of 100
                                                                       sensing wells is depicted in Figure 18. Light of 642-nm
                                                 Silicon support
                                                                       wavelength is coupled from a low-cost diode laser
                                                                       array into the excitation waveguides of the chip. In
Figure 16: Sensing principle [42].                                     each sensing well, analyte molecules can be captured.
202         K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform
Excitation waveguides
                                                                                                                             Sensing wells
                                                                             Collection waveguides                                        A
the optical signal is split by a 1 × 11 MMI. The optical and          ratio between the original channel width and the sidewall
fluidic modules are connected by a bonding process and                gratings. High grating reflectivity was measured in the
diced to a chip size of 52 mm × 16 mm.                                1550-nm wavelength range. On top of the passive Si3N4
                                                                      platform an erbium (Er3+)-doped aluminum oxide film
                                                                      with an Er3+ concentration of 1.3 × 1020 cm-3 was integrated
3.4 Special applications                                              by reactive co-sputtering [99]. The laser performance of
                                                                      several DBR and DFB grating configurations was meas-
Besides the above-discussed conventional application                  ured applying 974-nm pumping. Pump thresholds, laser
fields, the technology platform has also entered emerging             output powers, conversion efficiencies, and side mode
areas of photonics and special applications such as inte-             suppressions of 11 mW, 2.1 mW, 5.2%, and 50dB, respec-
grated light sources, nonlinear optic devices, components             tively, were achieved.
for space, and quantum computing.                                          Ultra-narrow linewidth laser components have been
     The active/passive integration potential of the silicon          realized by hybrid integration of III-V laser diodes with a
nitride technology was, for example, demonstrated by                  TriPleX cavity in a so-called waveguide-based external
the monolithic implementation of optically pumped                     cavity semiconductor laser (WECSL) configuration [100].
DFB lasers (Figure 19). For this purpose, side wall grat-             The design is based on the box shell geometry and exploits
ings with 520-nm period have been etched by stepper                   the response of two integrated MRRs acting as external
lithography into the 4.6-μm-wide silicon nitride channel              mirror and having radii of 50 and 55 μm, respectively. The
waveguides [98]. The grating coupling constant can be                 layout of the frequency-selective mirror component realized
controlled between 13 and 310 cm-1 by adjusting the aspect            in TriPleX technology is shown in Figure 20. A laser diode
                                                                      equipped with only one mirror is connected to the input
                                                                      port (IN) of the chip. To monitor the laser and mirror perfor-
                                                                      mance in greater detail, three output ports (OUT) are added
                                                                      to the design, whereas OUT3 provides the actual response
                                                                      of the WECSL. The measured FWHM laser linewidth and
                                                                      side mode suppression ratio of the WECSL are 25 kHz and
                                                                      50 dB, respectively. Wavelength tuning over the full tel-
                                                                      ecommunications C-band (1530–1565 nm) is demonstrated.
                                                                           For nonlinear optic applications, high modal confine-
                                                                      ment in the photonic waveguide is of importance. There-
                                                                      fore, the filled box geometry of the TriPleX platform with
                                                                      core cross sections of 1.2 μm × 0.8 μm is highly attractive.
                                                                      In ongoing research, this technology is implemented for
                                                                      the design and realization of components for supercon-
                                                                      tinuum generation with over 700 nm spectral bandwidth
                                                                      [101] and four-wave mixing in the 800–1500 nm wave-
                                                                      length range [102].
                                                                           The specific requirements of several applications
                                                                      for space research can be met by the TriPleX technology.
                                                                           4 Conclusions
                                                                           LioniX’ TriPleX technology is a versatile photonics plat-
                                                                           form suited for applications over a wide wavelength range
                                                                           covering the transparency window from 0.4 to 2.35 μm.
                                                                           Ultralow-loss channel waveguides with propagation losses
                                                                           down to 0.0005 dB/cm have been demonstrated. The mon-
                                                                           olithic integration of low- and high-contrast waveguides
                                                                           on the same chip enables the realization of low-loss spot-
                                                                           size converters. Therefore, TriPleX chips are suitable joints
                                                                           between different high-index platforms such as III-V or SOI
                                                                           and standard optical fibers giving access to the ‘outside
                                                                           world’. Currently, substantial effort is put into the devel-
                                                                           opment of low-cost integration and assembly techniques
                                                                 A
                                                                           for adding complementary functionalities of the different
                                                                           photonic platforms into a single package.
                                                                                In this paper, we have reviewed a wide range of appli-
                                                                           cation examples that have been realized in or enabled by
                                                                           TriPleX technology. In the area of communications, com-
                                                                           ponents for telecommunication networks and microwave
                                                                           photonics operating in the 1.3- and 1.5-μm wavelength
                                                                           window are discussed. High-performance filtering and
                                                                           true time delay concepts are surveyed, and components
                                                                           with high functional complexity for optical beam-form-
                                                                           ing networks are introduced. Milestones in the develop-
                                                                           ment of miniaturized biomedical devices can be mainly
                                                                           found in the field of optical coherence tomography and
                                                                           integrated Raman spectroscopy. The results addressed in
                                                                           this paper cover functional devices operating over a broad
                                                                           spectral range, from VIS to 1.3 μm. Although results in this
                                                                           field are still preliminary, the potential of integrated optics
                                                                           solutions becomes clear. Finally, sensor devices and sub-
                                                                           systems are addressed. Main application fields are envi-
                                                                           ronmental control, food/water safety, and security. The
                                                                B
                                                                           spectral range of interest is at a visible wavelength and
                                                                           at 850 nm due to access to low-cost VCSEL light sources.
Figure 21: MRR-based in-flight calibration module for earth-orbiting
satellites; optical chip propagation inspection with VIS light (A) and     State-of-the-art sensing concepts developed on the TriPleX
module assembly (B) [21].                                                  platform allow for detection limits around 10-7 RIU.
                                                                                The functionality of the TriPleX platform is captured
In general, components for space missions need to be                       by verified basic building blocks and incorporated in the
highly compact, robust, lightweight, and low on power                      library of a design kit developed by LioniX and PhoeniX
consumption. One example of a realized module for                          Software. The availability of this library in combination
the ExoMars mission was discussed in the fluorescence                      with affordable manufacturing through MPW shuttle runs
sensing section of this paper. Another application is                      lowers the threshold for researchers and entrepreneurs to
addressed by the development of spectroscopic tech-                        enter and exploit photonics technology.
niques on earth-orbiting satellites where an in-flight cali-
bration module for the 2.3- to 2.4-μm wavelength range                     Acknowledgments: The authors would like to thank
was designed with thermally tunable MRR building                           R. Duer (iNDX Lifecare Inc.), C. Roeloffzen (SatraX BV),
blocks based on the asymmetric stripe geometry [21, 103].                  and J. van Kerkhof (XiO Photonics BV) for providing pho-
The packaged module (Figure 21) has an insertion loss as                   tographs of their commercial products based on TriPleX
low as 2.4 dB.                                                             chip technology. Co-workers of the following research
                                                                 K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform          205
groups and companies are acknowledged for the fruitful                    [21] M. Hoekman, J. Dingjan, P. J. Harmsma, R. P. Ebeling,
discussions and collaborations: Department of Electri-                         D. M. R. Lo Cascio, et al., Poster in ‘ESA Round Table on Micro
                                                                               and Nano Technologies’ (2014).
cal and Computer Engineering at the University of Cali-
                                                                          [22] http://www.phoenixbv.com/index.php.
fornia Santa Barbara, Politecnico di Milano, SatraX BV,                   [23] http://www.vlcphotonics.com/mpw/.
Telecommunication Engineering Group at the University                     [24] http://www.oclaro.com/technology/photonic-integration/.
of Twente, Morton Photonics Inc., Photonics Research                      [25] www.jeppix.eu, http://paradigm.jeppix.eu/.
Group at Ghent University, Biomedical Engineering and                     [26] http://www.hhi.fraunhofer.de/fields-of-competence/photonic-
                                                                               components.html.
Physics Group at Amsterdam Medical Center, Department
                                                                          [27] http://www.smartphotonics.nl/.
of Imaging Physics at Delft University of Technology, TNO,                [28] http://www.epixfab.eu/, http://www.europractice-ic.com/.
iNDX Lifecare Inc., Division of Information Transmission                  [29] http://www-leti.cea.fr/en.
Systems and Material Technology at National Technical                     [30] http://www.a-star.edu.sg/ime/.
University of Athens, XiO Photonics BV, Laser Physics and                 [31] http://www.lionixbv.nl/technology/technology-integrated-
Nonlinear Optics Group at the University of Twente, Phoe-                      optics.html.
                                                                          [32] R. G. Heideman, A. Leinse, W. Hoving, R. Dekker,
niX BV.
                                                                               D. H. Geuzebroek, et al., in ‘Proc. SPIE Vol. 7221’, (2009)
                                                                               pp. 72210R1.
                                                                          [33] C. G. H. Roeloffzen, L. Zhuang, C. Taddei, A. Leinse,
[51] J. F. Bauters, M. J. R. Heck, D. D. John, J. S. Barton,                 [78] P. A. Morton, J. B. Khurgin, Z. Mizrahi and S. J. Morton, in
     C. M. Bruinink, et al., Opt. Express 19, 24090 (2011).                       ‘Proc. Avionics, Fiber-Optics and Photonics Technology Conf.’,
[52] J. F. Bauters, M. J. R. Heck, D. D. John, M.-C. Tien, W. Li, et al.,         (IEEE, Atlanta, GA, USA, 2014), pp. 27–28.
     in ‘Proc. ECOC’, (OSA, Geneva, September 18–22, 2011) paper             [79] R. L. Moreira, J. Garcia, W. Li, J. Bauters, J. S. Barton, et al.,
     Th12.3.                                                                      IEEE Phot. Tech. L. 25, 1165 (2013).
[53] J. P. Epping, M. Hoekman, R. Mateman, A. Leinse,                        [80] L. Zhuang, M. Hoekman, C. Taddei, A. Leinse, R. G. Heideman,
     R. G. Heideman, et al., Opt. Express 23, 643 (2015).                         et al., Opt. Express 22, 17079 (2014).
[54] M. J. Wale, Roadmap for InP and TriPleX-based Photonic                  [81] C. Taddei, L. Zhuang, M. Hoekman, C. Roeloffzen, R.
     Integration, presented at 5th European Photonic Integration                  Oldenbeuving, et al., in ‘Proc. International Topical meeting
     Forum, ECOC Workshop: Low-Cost Access to Photonic ICs                        on Microwave Photonics/The 9th Asia-Pacific Microwave
     (London, 22nd September 2013).                                              Photonics Conf.’, (IEEE, Sapporo, Japan, 20–23 October 2014)
[55] M. J. R. Heck, J. F. Bauters, M. L. Davenport, D. T. Spencer and             paper TuC-4.
     J. E. Bowers, Laser Photonics Rev. 8, 667 (2014).                       [82] V. D. Nguyen, N. Weiss, W. Beeker, M. Hoekman, A. Leinse,
[56] D. Dai, J. Bauters and J. E. Bowers, Light Sci. Appl. 1, 1 (2012).           et al., Opt. Lett. 37, 4820 (2012).
[57] M. Piels, J. F. Bauters, M. L. Davenport, M. J. R. Heck and             [83] M. Boerkamp, T. van Leest, J. Heldens, A. Leinse,
     J. E. Bowers, J. Lightwave Technol. 32, 817 (2014).                          M. Hoekman, et al., Opt. Express 22, 30528 (2014).
[58] M. Davenport, J. Bauters, M. Piels, A. Chen, A. Fang, et al.,           [84] http://www.xiophotonics.com/index.php/hyperion-inte-
     in ‘Proc. NFOEC’, (OSA, Anaheim, March 17–21, 2013) paper                    grated-multi-color-laser-source.
     PDP2C.5.                                                                [85] P. V. Lambeck, Meas. Sci. Technol. 17, R93 (2006).
[59] EU FP7 project PHASTFlex (http://www.phastflex.eu/).                    [86] E. Verdult, NanoNextNL magazine 1, 16 (2013), http://www.
[60] R. G. Heideman and M. Hoekman, Two-dimensional tapered cou-                  nanonextnl.nl/.
     pler (nonlinear taper), U.S. Patent Application No.: 14/270,014.        [87] R. G. Heideman, R. P. H. Kooyman and J. Greve, Sensor Actuat
[61] J. Yue, F. H. Falke, J. C. Schouten and T. A. Nijhuis, Lab Chip 13,          B-Chem 10, 209 (1993).
     4855 (2013).                                                            [88] A. Brandenburg, R. Edelhäuser and F. Hutter, Sensor Actuat
[62] http://www.lionixbv.nl/triplexmpw.html.                                      B-Chem 11, 361 (1993).
[63] http://www.actphast.eu/.                                                [89] K. De Vos, I. Bartolozzi, E. Schacht, P. Bienstman and
[64] T. J. Kippenberg, S. M. Spillane and K. J. Vahala, Appl. Phys.               R. Baets, Opt. Express 15, 7610 (2007).
     Lett. 85, 6113 (2004).                                                  [90] D. X. Xu, A. Densmore, A. Delâge, P. Waldron, R. McKinnon,
[65] D. T. Spencer, Y. Tang, J. F. Bauters, M. J. R. Heck and                     et al., Opt. Express 16, 15137 (2008).
     J. E. Bowers, in ‘Proc. IEEE Photonics Conf.’, (IEEE, Burlingame,       [91] K. Misiakos, I. Raptis, A. Salapatas, E. Makarona,
     2012) pp. 141–142.                                                           A. Botsialas, et al., Opt. Express 22, 8856 (2014).
[66] D. T. Spencer, J. F. Bauters, M. J. R. Heck and J. E. Bowers,           [92] B. J. Luff, J. S. Wilkinson, J. Piehler, U. Hollenbach, J. Ingenhoff
     Optica 1, 153 (2014).                                                        et al., J. Lightwave Technol. 16, 583 (1998).
[67] M. C. Tien, J. F. Bauters, M. J. R. Heck, D. T. Spencer,                [93] A. Densmore, D. X. Xu, P. Waldron, S. Janz, P. Cheben, et al.,
     D. J. Blumenthal, et al., Opt. Express 19, 13551 (2011).                     IEEE Phot. Tech. L. 18, 2520 (2006).
[68] D. Dai, Z. Wang, J. F. Bauters, M. C. Tien, M. J. R. Heck, et al.,      [94] L. Gounaridis, P. Groumas, E. Schreuder, R. Heideman,
     Opt. Express 19, 14130 (2011).                                               V. Katopodis, et al., Sensor Actuat. B-Chem., 209, 1057
[69] L. Zhuang, W. P. Beeker, A. Leinse, R. G. Heideman and                       (2015).
     C. G. H. Roeloffzen, Opt. Express 21, 3114 (2013).                      [95] iNDx lifecare (http://indxlifecare.com/).
[70] L. Zhuang, M. R. Khan, W. P. Beeker, A. Leinse, R. G. Heideman,         [96] R. Duer, R. Lund, R. Tanaka, D. A. Christensen and
     et al., Opt. Express 20, 26499 (2012).                                       J. N. Herron, Anal. Chem. 82, 8856 (2010).
[71] M. Burla, D. A. I. Marpaung, L. Zhuang, C. G. H. Roeloffzen,            [97] A. Prak, H. Leeuwis, R. G. Heideman, A. Leinse and G. Borst, in
     M. R. Khan, et al., Opt. Express 19, 21476 (2011).                           ‘Proc. SPIE Vol. 7928’, (SPIE, San Francisco, January 22, 2011)
[72] D. A. I. Marpaung, L. Chevalier, M. Burla and                                paper L-1.
     C. G. H. Roeloffzen, Opt. Express 19, 24839 (2011).                     [98] M. Belt, J. Bovington, R. Moreira, J. F. Bauters, M. J. R. Heck,
[73] D. Marpaung, B. Morrison, R. Pant, C. Roeloffzen, A. Leinse,                 et al., Opt. Express 21, 1181 (2013).
     et al., Opt. Express 21, 23286 (2013).                                  [99] M. Belt and D.J. Blumenthal, Opt. Express 22, 10655 (2014).
[74] C. G. H. Roeloffzen, R. M. Oldenbeuving, R. B. Timens,                 [100] R. M. Oldenbeuving, E. J. Klein, H. L. Offerhaus, C. J. Lee,
     P. W. L. van Dijk, C. Taddei, et al., in ‘Proc. Optical Fiber Com-           H. Song, et al., Phys. Lett. 10, 015804 (2013).
     munication Conf.’, (OSA, Los Angeles, March 22–26, 2015),              [101] J. P. Epping, T. Hellwig, R. Mateman, A. van Rees,
     invited paper Tu3F.4.                                                        M. Hoekman, et al., in ‘Proc. Of 6th EPS-QEOD Europhoton
[75] M. Burla, D. Marpaung, L. Zhuang, M. Khan, A. Leinse, et al.,                Conf.’, (OSA, Neuchâtel, Switzerland, August 24–29, 2014).
     J. Lightwave Technol. 32, 3509 (2014).                                 [102] J. P. Epping, M. Kues, P. J. M. van der Slot, C. J. Lee, C. Fallnich,
[76] L. Zhuang, C. G. H. Roeloffzen, A. Meijerink, M. Burla,                      et al., Opt. Express 21, 32123 (2013).
     D. A. I. Marpaung, et al., J. Lightwave Technol. 28, 19 (2010).        [103] R. P. Ebeling, P. J. Harmsma, D. M. R. Lo Cascio, M. Hoekman,
[77] P. A. Morton, J. B. Khurgin, Z. Mizrahi and S. J. Morton, in ‘Proc.          W. P. Beeker, et al., in ‘Proc. IEEE/LEOS Benelux Ann. Symp.’,
     CLEO’, (OSA, San Jose, June 8–13, 2014) paper AW3P.6.                        (IEEE, Mons, November 29–30, 2012) pp. 109–112.
                                                              K. Wörhoff et al.: TriPleX: a versatile dielectric photonic platform    207