Photonic Crystals Tutorial (original) (raw)
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Photonic Crystals:
Periodic Surprises in Electromagnetism
Steven G. Johnson
a one-week seminar (five 1.5-hour lectures)
MIT MRS Chapter, 2003 IAP tutorial series, organized by Ion Bita
(with subsequent supplements)
See also: Photonic Crystals: Molding the Flow of Light (second edition)
— our new (2008) textbook, available online at no cost
See also: MIT Fall Semester 2005: 18.325 — Mathematical Methods in Nanophotonics
See also: MIT Spring Semester 2008: 18.369 — Mathematical Methods in Nanophotonics
Has there been anything new in classical electromagnetism since Maxwell laid down the law in 1864? If so, can one learn it without wading through a vectorial mire of partial differential equations? Come and find out what solid-state physics has brought to 8.02 in the last 15 years: photonic crystals and the surprising new phenomena that arise when light propagates through a periodic medium. This crash course will introduce Bloch's theorem for electromagnetism, photonic band gaps, the confinement of light in novel waveguides and cavities by synthetic optical "insulators," startling sub-micron fabrication advances, exotic optical fibers, and will upend what you thought you knew about total internal reflection. We will focus less on gory differential equations than on high-level approaches such as linear algebra, variational theorems, conservation laws, and coupled-mode theory; the course should be accessible to anyone with a grasp of basic electromagnetism and who does not quake in fear at the word "eigenvalue."
SPIE Short Course
My most recent lecture materials are from my short course (SC608) offered periodically at the SPIE Photonics conferences (Photonics West, Photonics North, Optics & Photonics, etc.):
- Photonic Crystals: A Crash Course: PDF (39MB) and PowerPoint (46MB) slides.
Older Syllabus and Lecture Materials: IAP 2003
These are older lecture materials from the IAP short course mentioned above; they are mainly superseded by the SPIE course notes above.
- Lecture 1: Wave propagation in periodic systems. Bloch's theorem, the electromagnetic eigenvalue problem, band diagrams, the variational theorem, and the origin of the photonic band gap. 1d/2d/3d crystal examples.
- Slides: PDF (5MB), PowerPoint (2.7MB) (updated May 2004)
- Supplementary material: S. G. Johnson and J. D. Joannopoulos, "Introduction to Photonic Crystals: Bloch's Theorem, Band Diagrams, and Gaps (But No Defects)" (2003). (Also covers some material from lectures 4 and 5.)
- Lecture 2: Point defects (cavities) and line defects (waveguides). Their novel properties, and combination into interesting devices such as filters. Coupled-mode theory and projected band structures.
- Slides: PDF (6.2MB), PowerPoint (7.2MB) (updated May 2004)
- The movies from the chanenel-drop slide can be found on our channel-drop page.
- Lecture 3: Fabrication technologies for 3d photonic crystals, a survey.
- Slides: PDF (26MB), PowerPoint (36MB) (updated May 2004)
- Lecture 4: Hybrid structures lacking a complete band gap. Photonic-crystal slabs: index-guiding in periodic systems, projected band diagrams, waveguides, cavities, and losses. Omnidirectional mirrors with 1d crystals.
- Slides: PDF (4.4MB), PowerPoint (4.3MB)
- Lecture 5: Photonic-crystal and micro-structured fibers: Bragg (& OmniGuide) fibers, 2d-crystal fibers, holey (index-guided) fibers. Perturbation theory in electromagnetism.
- Slides: PDF (16MB), PowerPoint (12.5MB) (updated May 2004)
- The movie from the hollow-fiber slide: QuickTime (4.1MB), QuickTime hi-res (14MB), Windows Media hi-res (21MB) (hollow bandgap polymer/chalcogenide fiber carrying 1-2W of 10.6um laser power, burning a hole through a post-it note covered with a film of the same polymer). Courtesy Y. Fink, S. Hart, et al..
The PDF slides are best viewed via the stand-alone Acrobat reader program in full-screen mode, or at least using the page-forward button instead of the scroll-bar, since many of the slide transitions involve a crude animation that requires inter-slide alignment.
Additional Lectures
Here are provided the materials from subsequent lectures and tutorials on photonic crystals by SGJ. Many of these slides are taken or adapted from the tutorial seminar above.
- Tutorial for a Photonic Crystal Workshop sponsored by the IEEE Laser and Electro-Optics Society (LEOS) in March-April 2005. PDF (32MB) and PowerPoint (35MB) slides.
- A tutorial at OFC 2004on the Design and modeling of microstructured optical fiber(some overlap with lecture 5, above, but with a greater focus on analysis and computation). PDF (2MB) and PowerPoint (3.9MB) slides.
- A 12/10/04 seminar on nanophotonic modeling as part of the MIT Atomistic Modeling and Simulation Seminars series.
- Seminar on nanophotonic modeling as part of the 2006 Cornell NNIN/CNF Workshop: PowerPoint(2.5MB) (uses animations <bend.mpg> and <straight.mpg>), PDF (3.2MB), [MPB demo](MPB
eigensolver demo.pdf) (+ example files one and two), excerpted appendix on computation based on upcoming Photonic Crystals: Molding the Flow of Light 2nd edition.
Computational Tools
The MIT Photonic-Bands (MPB) Package is a free program that can be used to compute band diagrams and eigenfields for the crystals and point/line defects described in this seminar.
Meep is a free program to perform time-domain (FDTD) simulations of arbitrary electromagnetic structures, which can be used to calculate transmission spectra, resonant modes, and many other things.
Both MPB and Meep are also installed on MIT's Project Athena (Sun and Linux workstations only). To use it, type add mpb
at the Unix prompt. A pointer to the documentation, and examples, can be found in /mit/mpb/README
.
Harminv is a program for extracting frequencies and decay rates from time series, and is a useful tool for modal analysis in time-domain simulations. (It is integrated directly into Meep.)
Additional Reading
- J. D. Joannopoulos, S. G. Johnson, R. D. Meade, and J. N. Winn, Photonic Crystals: Molding the Flow of Light, second edition (Princeton Univ. Press, 2008). MIT Libraries: QC793.5.P427.J63 (Physics Reading Room, Hayden Reserves, Science Library).
- See our web page on the book for purchasing information, and also to read the entire book online.
- S. G. Johnson and J. D. Joannopoulos, Photonic Crystals: The Road from Theory to Practice (Kluwer, 2002). MIT Science Library: QC793.5.P427.J64
Acknowledgements
We are especially indebted to J. D. Joannopoulos, D. Norris,Y. Fink, S. Hart, J. W. Perry, K. Aoki, and F. Garcia-Santamariafor graciously providing additional materials for the lectures. Ion Bita of the MIT Materials Science and Engineering Department provided the impetus and initial inspiration for this seminar, as well as invaluable organizational assistance.
These lectures would not have been possible without many high-quality publications from research groups around the globe, whom we have tried hard to cite properly for all excerpted figures and quoted results. We are grateful to them in advance for not suing us for copyright infringement, although hopefully this educational presentation falls under the Fair Use exemption.
All mistakes and bad jokes are due to S. G. Johnson, however.