Abstract
Whispering gallery mode (WGM) microbubble cavities are a versatile optofluidic sensing platform owing to their hollow core geometry. To increase the light–matter interaction and, thereby, achieve higher sensitivity, thin-walled microbubbles are desirable. However, a lack of knowledge about the precise geometry of hollow microbubbles prevents us from having an accurate theoretical model to describe the WGMs and their response to external stimuli. In this work, we provide a complete characterization of the wall structure of a microbubble and propose a theoretical model for the WGMs in this thin-walled microcavity based on the optical waveguide approach. Structural characterization of the wavelength-scale wall is enabled by focused ion beam milling and scanning electron microscopy imaging. The proposed theoretical model is verified by finite element method simulations. Our approach can readily be extended to other low-dimensional micro-/nanophotonic structures.
© 2023 Chinese Laser Press
1. INTRODUCTION
Optical microcavities supporting whispering gallery modes (WGMs) have been investigated intensively in the past two decades [1,2] due to their ultrahigh quality factor (-factor), which makes them suitable for various optical applications ranging from cavity quantum electrodynamics [3–7] to label-free optical detection [8–12]. Compared with the widely used WGM microcavity geometries such as microspheres [13,14], microtoroids [15], and microrings [16], microbubble cavities or microbubbles [17–20] have the advantage of a hollow core and can be used as optofluidic devices in an all-fiber manner [21–25]. Moreover, the resultant thin-walled structure of microbubbles provides us with new degrees of freedom, such as the thickness of the wall and its variation along the cavity axis. These allow us to engineer properties related to WGMs such as mode field distribution, mode dispersion, and mode spectrum. Such engineered WGMs are particularly useful for various nonlinear optical processes, for example, four-wave parametric oscillation and frequency comb generation [26–29]. Therefore, an accurate determination of the geometry of a microbubble to precisely characterize its WGMs is an important prerequisite for practical applications of such cavities.
Several methods to determine the thin-walled structure of microbubble cavities in a non-destructive way have already been reported. Bright-field microscopy is probably the simplest approach for measuring the diameter of a microbubble [30], but the low image contrast at a reasonable field of view excludes it as an effective way for a wall thickness measurement. Confocal microscopy has been used to measure the wall thickness of microbubble cavities [31]; however, the image resolution limits the accuracy of the measured thickness to half a wavelength. Obtaining the structural information of the microbubble by inferring its response to a certain stimulus seems to be a non-destructive method for the determination of wall thickness. For example, microbubble wall thickness was measured based on the internal aerostatic pressure sensing method with a measurement uncertainty on the submicron scale [32]. Nonetheless, such a method is not ideal as it requires precise knowledge of the structural information beforehand, and it also assumes a constant wall thickness along the cavity axis. Currently, the only reliable method for studying the wall structure of a microbubble is a destructive approach that involves breaking the microbubble and then measuring its cross-section using, for example, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) [26,33,34]. However, a constant wall thickness along the cavity axis is generally assumed. A fully systematic study on the microbubble wall structure is yet to be carried out.
In this work, we fully characterize the wall structure of a microbubble cavity using focused ion beam (FIB) milling and SEM imaging. Both the wall thickness and its variation along the cavity axis are obtained, thus enabling us to precisely model the microbubble geometry. Considering the wavelength-scale wall thickness, a theoretical model based on optical waveguide theory is proposed to describe the WGMs in the microbubble cavity. Finite element method simulations are performed to verify the validity of the proposed theoretical model. Our results will benefit not only the development of microbubble cavities but also the exploration of other low-dimensional micro-/nano-photonic structures.
2. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
Silica microbubbles were fabricated as described previously [33]: a fused silica capillary ( outer diameter and inner diameter) was tapered down via a heat-and-pull process using a laser, resulting in a microcapillary waist. By filling the capillary with compressed gas and increasing the laser power, microbubbles were produced from the microcapillary. The wall structure of a microbubble (with a thin Au layer coating) at the microcapillary waist was determined by means of FIB milling and SEM imaging (FEI Helios G3 UC); see Fig. 1. Due to the high imaging resolution of both the SEM and FIB, the microbubble’s wall structure was clearly visible. The largest diameter was around 64 μm at the bubble center, where the wall thickness was the smallest (). The bubble diameter gradually decreased, following a Gaussian profile, down to around 28 μm at the support stem, where the wall was thickest at . With this structural information, the mode structure of the thin-walled microbubble could be fully determined by either theoretical models or numerical simulations, as shown below.
Wall thickness is a crucial parameter to measure the performance of microbubble-based optical sensors [33]. However, due to the lack of an efficient approach to fully characterize the wall structure, geometrical approaches [30,31,35,36] have widely been used to estimate the wall thickness. These models are based on two assumptions, i.e., constant wall thickness and mass conservation. The first assumption is meaningful when making order-of-magnitude estimates. The second assumption can be split into the following two scenarios: area conservation or volume conservation. In the first case, the microbubble is considered to be the result of cylindrical expansion of a capillary. The cross section of the capillary is a ring with an area of , where is the bubble’s outer diameter and its wall thickness (). The conserved area leads to a reciprocal linear relationship between and , i.e., , with coefficient . Similarly, for the second case, the microbubble can be viewed as the result of spherical expansion of a spherical bubble with the same diameter as the capillary. Since the volume of the spherical bubble is , a reciprocal quadratic relation of is obtained with as a coefficient. It is generally believed that the cylindrical expansion gives an over-estimation of wall thickness, therefore the upper limit for the measured thickness, while the lower limit is obtained from spherical expansion [31].
Figure 1(e) shows the versus relationship for the thin-walled microbubble. The wall thickness of the microbubble varies along the bubble axis, clearly showing that it does not have a constant wall thickness, invalidating the first assumption mentioned above. The second assumption is also invalid because the relationship between and is neither reciprocal linear nor reciprocal quadratic. Nevertheless, around the center of the thin-walled microbubble ( from the microbubble center), a reciprocal linear relationship between and is satisfied. We attribute these seemingly unusual results to the fact that only the center of the microbubble was melted and fully expanded, while the portions near the support stems experienced lower temperatures and were unable to fully expand. These findings demonstrate the importance of developing an efficient approach for characterizing the wall structure of microbubbles.
3. THEORETICAL MODEL
As a type of optical bottle microresonator (BMR), light in microbubbles is trapped in the cross-sectional plane, circulating around the bubble axis, while confined axially, bouncing back and forth between two turning points known as caustics; this is similar to the way charged particles are trapped in magnetic bottles [37]. Such a confinement of light in three dimensions results in the quantization of optical fields into a series of optical modes. With the structural information [Fig. 2(a)] obtained from experimental measurements, the mode structure of the thin-walled microbubble can be theoretically modeled by simplifying Maxwell’s equations.
For azimuthally and axially symmetric microbubbles made of isotropic and homogeneous nonmagnetic dielectric materials, optical spin–orbit coupling is absent [38,39]. Furthermore, most of these microbubbles have a relatively small diameter variation along the axial direction [see Fig. 2(a)]. Therefore, the two sets of polarization modes can be well separated: transverse electric (TE) modes with nonzero axial electric fields and the equivalent transverse magnetic (TM) modes with nonzero axial magnetic fields. Since TE modes preferentially exist in thin-walled microbubbles, only will they be considered in the subsequent analysis. The Helmholtz equation for the nonzero axial electric field of TE modes reads
Here, is the wave vector, is the angular frequency, is the speed of light, () is the permittivity (permeability) in vacuum, and is the position vector. The relative permittivity , where is the permittivity of a material. The relative permeability of nonmagnetic materials in the visible and infrared spectral ranges is close to unity, and one may set the material’s permeability .The scalar Helmholtz equation for is a three-dimensional (3D) partial differential equation. It can be further simplified by the method of separation of variables in the cylindrical coordinates , defined in Fig. 2(a). To this end, can be expressed in the separable form
where , , and are the radial, azimuthal, and axial field components, respectively. Substituting Eq. (2) into Eq. (1), three ordinary differential equations for the respective field components are obtained: which are coupled via two coupling constants and . Here, couples the dynamics of the radial and circular components of light propagation, while couples the dynamics of the lateral and axial components of light propagation. In the end, the discrete spectrum can be obtained by solving these three ordinary differential equations, Eqs. (3)–(5).The general solution of Eq. (3) consists of a linear combination of Bessel functions of the first and second kinds. Their coefficients are determined by matching the wall boundary condition [Fig. 2(b)]. The Bessel functions, and therefore , look like oscillating sine or cosine functions that decay proportionally to . Different radial modes can be distinguished by the number of “peaks” in the , with each mode labeled by a unique radial mode index . Equation (3) quantifies the effect of wall thickness on these radial modes by using an effective permittivity , i.e., the first coupling constant, which measures the degree of light confinement by the wall [see the inset of Fig. 2(b)]. Since the diameter of microbubbles is typically in the range of a few tens of micrometers, the weakly curved condition is satisfied, and the microbubble wall can be treated as a slab waveguide. Then, can be easily found via the transcendental equation based on the well-established optical waveguide theory [40]:
where , , , with and the relative permittivities of the surrounding air and the microbubble’s core material, respectively. Figure 2(e) shows the calculated as a function of wall thickness at a few wavelengths of interest. It is clear that the microbubble wall plays a crucial role when its thickness is close to the propagating wavelength. In other words, drops rapidly once the wall thickness is less than the wavelength, as is the case for most microbubble cavities.The general solution of Eq. (4) is with amplitude and initial phase , where can be called the propagation constant. Note that “” corresponds to the clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW) modes [9]. To have a stable optical field distribution, the solution must satisfy the periodic boundary condition [Fig. 2(d)]
where is the wavelength in the cross-sectional plane. On the one hand, it leads to WGMs identified by the azimuthal mode index . On the other hand, it determines the in this cross-section, i.e., the second coupling constant. Figure 2(g) shows the dependence of on the outer diameter. Generally speaking, the smaller the outer diameter, the stronger the azimuthal optical confinement.The last equation, Eq. (5), describes the axial dynamics of WGMs. It is a quasi-Schrödinger equation with the quasipotential
where the elementary charge is used to scale the quasipotential in eV. Although not explicitly mentioned in the literature, the quasipotential in most microbubble cavities forms a quantum well, which confines the axial motion of WGMs [Fig. 2(c)]. The quantization of the axial motion in the quantum well results in different axial modes indicated by the axial mode index . However, due to the lack of analytical solutions for most quantum well quasipotentials, the finite difference method is widely employed as a reliable numerical approximation technique to solve the quasi-Schrödinger equation. In the finite difference method, this second-order differential equation is discretized into linear equations: for , where represents the step size. These linear equations form an matrix equation that can be easily solved using the diagonalization method. The eigenvalues of the matrix equation are the resonance frequencies of the axial modes, while the corresponding eigenvectors are the axial field distributions [40]. It is worth noting that there exist axial potentials that have analytical solutions, such as the harmonic potential [41]; nevertheless, it is a significant challenge to fabricate a microbubble with the desired potential.The customizability of their axial modes distinguishes microbottle cavities from microsphere and microtoroid cavities [42]. As one type of microbottle cavity, microbubbles provide a new degree of freedom, i.e., the wall structure, in tailoring axial modes. This becomes clearer with the theoretical model presented here: both wall thickness and its variation contribute to the axial quasipotential in Eq. (8) by determining through Eq. (6) and subsequently influencing the value of as described in Eq. (7). Figure 2(f) shows an example where a microbubble can provide a quantum barrier for the axial optical motion if the quasipotential is formed solely by the wall structure. This is similar to the axial mode engineering in rolled-up microbottle cavities [40,43–46].
4. SIMULATION VERIFICATION
The measured 3D structure of the thin-walled microbubble [Fig. 2(a)] allows us to characterize the shape with great accuracy. Therefore, a series of simulations based on the finite element method was carried out, and the results are summarized in Fig. 3. These simulation results were used to verify the validity of the proposed theoretical model.
Figure 3(a) shows the resonant wavelengths of WGMs with ranging from 165 to 175 ( and ). The calculated values () using the aforementioned theoretical model agree with the simulation results () over a wide spectral range. For example, the mean value of the relative deviation is only 0.09%. Such good agreement confirms the validity of the proposed theoretical model based on the optical waveguide approximation. This deepens our understanding of the underlying physics and facilitates the design for device applications using thin-walled microbubble cavities.
The comparison for the axial modes is made in Fig. 3(b) for WGMs with and . Very good agreement between the theoretical model and simulations is also obtained. This confirms the effectiveness of treating the WGM axial dynamics in the same way as the dynamics of a particle in a quantum well. By doing so, thin-walled microbubble cavities become a reliable experimental platform to test quantum mechanics. On the other hand, quantum theory can be used to engineer axial modes.
5. DISCUSSION
First, the most intriguing finding in this work is the feasibility of using the FIB milling approach to explore the internal structure of a microbubble cavity. No special treatment was required for the FIB milling, and there was no observable deformation during or after the milling process. Additionally, there was no noticeable charging effect during the SEM imaging after milling. These observations demonstrate that it is a viable way for characterizing the actual structure of microbubbles, enabling us to go beyond oversimplified approximations such as treating them as uniform spheres.
Second, the proposed waveguide-based theoretical model for thin-walled microbubble cavities, after verification through simulations, suggests that treating them as 3D ring waveguide resonators is reasonable. This implies that design strategies and methodologies from on-chip photonics could potentially be applied to microbubble cavities. Nonetheless, one must also be aware of the limitations of this waveguide model. For example, when considering liquid-core microbubble cavities, the waveguide approximation may not be applicable to modes with a significant radial field extension.
Last but not least, the wall structure of a microbubble cavity is explicitly revealed in this work, and wall thickness variation is clearly visible. Therefore, for applications involving various axial modes across a broad spectral range, such as Kerr frequency combs, the thickness variation should be accounted for. However, for certain applications, such as single nanoparticle sensing, a constant thickness approximation for the bubble range of from the center should be acceptable when using low-order axial modes.
6. CONCLUSION
We have demonstrated an efficient way to fully characterize the wall structure of a microbubble cavity. The 3D geometry of the microbubble was reconstructed based on FIB milling and SEM imaging. Owing to the wavelength-scale wall thickness, a theoretical model based on the optical waveguide approximation has been proposed to describe the WGMs in the thin-walled microbubble cavity. Simulations have also been performed using the fabricated microbubble structure. Very good agreement between the proposed theoretical model and simulations has been obtained, verifying the validity of the proposed theory. The demonstrated characterization and modeling approaches are readily adaptable for other wavelength-scaled photonic devices.
Funding
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) (23K04617) and Grant-in-Aid for Early-Career Scientists (22K14621).
Acknowledgment
The authors thank the Engineering Section, the Scientific Computing & Data Analysis Section, and the Scientific Imaging Section of Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) for technical assistance.
Disclosures
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Data Availability
Data underlying the results presented in this paper are not publicly available at this time but may be obtained from the authors upon reasonable request.
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