posted on 2025-04-12, 16:29authored byKarl Johnson, Vladimir Fedorov, Dmitrii Belogolovskii, Andrew Grieco, Noah A. Rubin, Yeshaiahu Fainman
The modal dispersion of waveguides often limits integrated photonic devices to operation with a single polarization state. This presents a challenge for sensing and spectroscopy applications, which often require polarization diversity over wide bandwidths with high throughput. Here, we show that an unmodified thermally-driven silicon photonic Fourier transform spectrometer exhibits a polarization-separating effect in the frequency domain, even though only one polarization-insensitive detector is used. Using this effect, we experimentally demonstrate a simple on-chip spectrometer capable of extracting two-polarization spectra over a wide 1480-1630 nm bandwidth with a greater than 20 dB polarization extinction ratio. These specifications would be highly challenging to achieve using existing, conventional on-chip polarization-splitting techniques. We additionally demonstrate several improvements in calibration and testing that improve the performance of on-chip Fourier transform spectrometers even in the single-polarization case. The "interferometric modal splitting" principle which this spectrometer exemplifies is general to various on-chip spectrometer architectures, other spatial modes, and technologies other than thermally-driven Fourier transform spectrometers. Interferometric mode splitting shows promise as a general approach for robust and fundamentally broadband detection of orthogonal modes in guided-wave sensing.