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Abstract
Grating couplers are a fundamental building block of integrated optics as they allow light to be coupled from free-space to on-chip components and vice versa. A challenging task in designing any grating coupler is represented by the need for reducing back reflections at the waveguide-grating interface, which introduce additional losses and undesirable interference fringes. Here, we present a design approach for focusing TM grating couplers that minimizes these unwanted reflections by introducing a modified slot that fulfills an anti-reflection condition. We show that this antireflection condition can be met only for the Bloch mode of the grating that concentrates in the dielectric. As a consequence the light is scattered from the grating coupler with a negative angle, referred to as “backscattering design”. Our analytic model shows that the anti-reflection condition is transferrable to grating couplers on different waveguide platforms and that it applies for both TE and TM polarizations. Our experimentally realized focusing grating coupler for TM-modes on the silicon photonics platform has a coupling loss of (3.95 ± 0.15) dB at a wavelength of 1.55 µm. It has feature sizes above 200 nm and fully etched slots. The reflectivity between the grating coupler and the connected waveguide is suppressed to below 0.16%.
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Details

1 Institute of Optical and Electronic Materials, Hamburg University of Technology, Hamburg, Germany
2 Department of Physics, University of York, York, UK
3 Institute of Optical and Electronic Materials, Hamburg University of Technology, Hamburg, Germany; ITMO University, Petersburg, Russia
4 Institute of Optical and Electronic Materials, Hamburg University of Technology, Hamburg, Germany; Institute of Materials Research, Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht, Geesthacht, Germany