image: Dr Isha Sharma
Credit: Aston University
- Optical microresonators strongly confine and enhance light at microscopic level
- Researchers discovered they could finely tuned them by rotating two intersecting optical fibres
- The devices have potential applications within communication, computing, sensing and more.
Aston University researchers have developed a new class of optical microresonators, the miniature optical devices that strongly confine and enhance light in microscopic dimensions. They are essential components in a wide range of systems, including ultra-precise optical sensors and information processors.
The University researchers discovered that unique optical microresonators can be introduced at the intersection of two optical fibres. These devices have potential applications within communication, computing, sensing and more.
The new ultralow loss optical microresonators can be finely tuned by simply rotating two intersecting optical fibres. Unlike current monolithic microresonators these devices have a widely tuneable free spectral range (FSR) and allow for its precise control. The researchers were led by Professor Misha Sumetsky of Aston Institute of Photonic Technologies and was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. The team’s paper “Widely FSR tunable high Q-factor microresonators formed at the intersection of straight optical fibers” has been published in the journal Optica.
Researchers discovered they could finely tuned them by rotating two intersecting optical fibres. The devices have potential applications within communication, computing, sensing and more.
Professor Sumetsky said: “This geometry opens the door to miniaturised, tunable photonic systems that were previously difficult or impossible to achieve. It is especially promising for applications like low-repetition-rate frequency comb generators, tuneable delay lines and nonlocal optofluidic sensors.
“This work was initiated by experimental discovery of a microresonator at the optical fibre intersection by Dr Isha Sharma followed by our detailed investigation of their optical properties and tunability.
“Tiny rotation of a fibre by only a fraction of a degree translates to micron-scale fibre displacements, enabling millimetre-scale changes in the resonator geometry and picometer-scale tuning of its spectral and FSR characteristics. The resulting resonators maintain high-Q factors (∼2×10⁶), with potential to reach ∼10⁸ in cleaner environments.”
The research team demonstrated the new microresonators experimentally and supported their findings with theoretical modelling based on the surface nanoscale axial photonics (SNAP) platform. One notable discovery is the role of van der Waals forces (the forces that attracts neutral molecules to one another) in keeping the fibres in direct contact, contributing to resonator formation over sub-millimetre regions.
Professor Sumetsky added: “The proposed system is ideally suited for micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) integration, requiring only minimal actuation force to achieve FSR microresonator tunability. By enabling precision spectral control in chip-scale devices, this innovation holds potential across photonics, sensing and quantum information technologies.”
To read the paper visit https://opg.optica.org/optica/fulltext.cfm?uri=optica-12-6-890&id=572984#articleBody
Journal
Optica
Method of Research
Experimental study
Subject of Research
Not applicable
Article Title
"Widely FSR tunable high Q-factor microresonators formed at the intersection of straight optical fibers,"
Article Publication Date
16-Jun-2025