🧠 SemiSimTech Intuition Lab

Mode Confinement Intuition Lab

Build intuition for how geometry, index contrast, and wavelength shape optical confinement, effective index, evanescent field fraction, and field overlap in integrated photonics.

This lab is designed as the missing bridge between waveguide geometry and later device labs such as plasma dispersion, phase shifters, modulators, and edge couplers.

Physics Layer
Wave Optics
Core Mechanism
Mode Confinement
Primary Outputs
n_eff / Γ_core / Overlap
Bridge To
Plasma Dispersion / Modulators / Edge Couplers

📚 Navigation

🧩 Big Picture

Build intuition for how geometry, index contrast, and wavelength shape optical confinement, effective index, evanescent field fraction, and field overlap in integrated photonics.

This lab is designed as the missing bridge between waveguide geometry and later device labs such as plasma dispersion, phase shifters, modulators, and edge couplers.

Wave Optics Integrated Photonics Mode Confinement Effective Index Field Overlap
Input knob Main optical effect Why it matters
Geometry Changes how tightly the mode is held in the core Controls confinement strength, effective index, and overlap with local device perturbations
Index contrast Changes how strongly the core pulls the optical field inward Sets the balance between core confinement and evanescent leakage
Wavelength Changes the spatial extent of the mode Longer wavelength generally spreads the mode and weakens local interaction strength

🧠 Main Puzzle

Why does confinement matter so much beyond just “guiding light”?

A beginner may think confinement only determines whether a waveguide guides or not. In practice, confinement sets much more than that: it affects effective index, how much field leaks into the cladding, and how strongly the optical mode interacts with any localized device region.

tighter confinement → n_eff moves upward → evanescent fraction drops → overlap with core-localized perturbations rises

That is why this lab is the bridge to later device topics. Plasma dispersion, phase shifters, modulators, and edge couplers all depend on the mode shape and where the field energy actually lives.

Confinement logic

The project already contains a compact logic chain. Here it is framed as the system map for how to read the lab.

higher Δn + larger geometry → tighter confinement → higher n_eff → stronger overlap with core-localized effects

🎛️ Interactive Lab

Use the waveguide controls to explore how width, height, index contrast, wavelength, and active-region size reshape confinement, effective index, and device-oriented overlap.

Mode profile and confinement trends

The top-left panel shows a simplified 1D mode profile across the waveguide width. The top-right panel shows how confinement and effective index vary with width. The lower-left panel shows wavelength dependence, and the lower-right panel translates the result into a device-oriented overlap picture.

Δn contrast
0.00
n_eff
0.000
Core confinement Γ
0.000
Active-region overlap
0.000

Physics interpretation

Confinement logic

Mode size w_mode roughly follows: w_mode ∝ λ / [sqrt(n_core² - n_clad²) · geometry factor] Then: higher confinement → n_eff moves closer to n_core → evanescent fraction decreases → core-localized perturbations become stronger

Device connection

This lab feeds directly into: • Plasma Dispersion Lab • Phase Shifter Lab • Modulator Lab • Edge Coupler Lab Because all of them depend on: mode shape + overlap + n_eff

Higher index contrast

Usually means tighter confinement and smaller evanescent leakage into the cladding.

Larger geometry

Usually means a larger fraction of the optical energy stays inside the core region.

Longer wavelength

Usually makes the mode spread more, which lowers confinement and weakens local interaction strength.

🚀 Final Insight

Mode confinement is not just a waveguide property. It is the front-end control knob for effective index, evanescent leakage, and how strongly later photonic device perturbations can act on the optical mode.