Explore how free-carrier injection or depletion changes refractive index and optical loss in silicon photonic structures. This intuition lab connects plasma dispersion directly to phase shifters, MZI modulators, and VOA behavior.
In silicon photonics, changing the free-carrier concentration changes how light propagates. The same carrier tuning can shift the refractive index and also increase optical absorption. This is why plasma dispersion is one of the central mechanisms behind silicon phase shifters, MZI modulators, and some VOA-like behaviors. The main engineering value is that electrical carrier control can be translated into an optical phase or transmission change.
The important idea is not only that carriers change the optical response, but that they do it in two directions at once: they help create useful phase shift, while also adding optical penalty. That tradeoff is the core intuition this page is meant to build.
Si PhotonicsPlasma DispersionPhase ShifterModulatorVOA
Concept
Meaning in This Lab
Why It Matters
Free carriers
Electrons and holes introduced by injection, depletion, or bias control
They are the tuning handle that changes the optical response
Δn
Carrier-induced refractive index change
This is what lets a device accumulate optical phase shift
Δα
Carrier-induced absorption increase
This is the optical penalty that can grow with stronger carrier perturbation
Δφ
Accumulated phase shift over interaction length
In an MZI, this phase difference is converted into output intensity change
🧠 Main Puzzle
Why is plasma dispersion so useful and yet never “free”?
A beginner often expects a phase shifter to simply create phase shift. But in silicon, the same carrier tuning that changes index also tends to change absorption. So the real question is:
How much useful phase shift do I gain
for a given carrier perturbation
before the added loss starts to hurt performance?
This is the central engineering tradeoff behind many silicon photonic devices. A stronger carrier perturbation can improve phase efficiency, but it can also degrade insertion loss, extinction behavior, or overall optical budget.
How to read this lab
The simulator should be read as a chain of cause and effect, not as isolated plots. The key is to follow how carrier tuning propagates through the optical material response and finally becomes observable device behavior.
The original logic of the lab is preserved below as the main system map for how to interpret the project.
1) Carriers change
ΔN, ΔP
→
2) Optical material response changes
Δn, Δα
→
3) Phase accumulates over length L
Δφ
→
4) Interference converts phase to intensity
MZI output
→
5) Absorption competes with useful modulation
tradeoff
Original lab flow:
1) Carriers change → ΔN, ΔP
2) Optical material response changes → Δn, Δα
3) Phase accumulates over length L → Δφ
4) Interference converts phase to intensity → MZI output
5) Absorption competes with useful modulation → tradeoff
🧱 Vocabulary
Build the words before the simulator.
Free carriers
Electrons and holes introduced by injection, depletion, or bias control. They are the tuning handle in this lab.
Δn
Carrier-induced refractive index change. This is what lets a device accumulate optical phase shift.
Δα
Carrier-induced absorption increase. This is the optical penalty that often grows with stronger carrier perturbation.
Δφ
Accumulated phase shift over interaction length. In an MZI, this phase difference is converted into output intensity change.
⚙️ Theory in Simple Words
The equations below do not exist just to calculate numbers. They tell a story. First, carrier changes modify the optical material response: one part changes the index, another part changes loss. Then the optical mode travels through a finite interaction length, so even a small index shift can build up into a meaningful phase shift. Finally, when that phase shift is placed inside an interferometer such as an MZI, the phase difference becomes an observable transmission swing.
So the simulator should be read as a chain of cause and effect, not as isolated plots: carriers → material response → phase accumulation → interference output → engineering tradeoff.
Plasma dispersion intuition:
Δn = f(ΔN, ΔP)
Δα = g(ΔN, ΔP)
Phase shift:
Δφ = (2π / λ) · Δn · L
MZI output:
T ≈ 0.5 · [1 + cos(Δφ_eff)] · exp(-loss)
VOA behavior:
More carriers → more absorption → lower transmission
🎛️ Interactive Lab
Now explore the device behavior directly. Use the controls to change carrier density, wavelength, and interaction length, then watch how index change, loss, phase shift, and MZI transmission evolve together.
Carrier-induced optical response
The top-left plot shows how index change and free-carrier absorption co-evolve. The top-right plot converts the index shift into phase shift. The lower-left plot shows a simple MZI output, and the lower-right panel translates this into a qualitative waveguide picture.
Δn_eff
0.0000
Loss increase
0.00 dB
Phase shift
0.00 π
MZI transmission
0.00
Physics interpretation
Key intuition
More carriers
→ lower refractive index
→ larger phase shift magnitude
But also:
More carriers
→ more free-carrier absorption
→ more optical loss
So modulators and phase shifters always balance:
index efficiency vs optical penalty
Phase shifter
The main purpose is to convert carrier tuning into a useful optical phase shift.
MZI modulator
A phase shift in one arm becomes an intensity modulation at the output interference node.
VOA behavior
If absorption dominates, the same free-carrier mechanism can be used as a variable optical attenuator.
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