Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication

In this paper, a micro-stereo sensor is proposed using two-identical Panda-ring resonators, which are coupled by jointed drop ports. When light from the identical coherent sources is fed into the system via the input ports, the coupling outputs are obtained at the drop port at the resonant condition...

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Main Authors: Youplao, Phichai, Pornsuwancharoen, Nithiroth, Amiri, I. S., Jalil, M. A., Aziz, Muhammad Safwan, Ali, Jalil, Singh, Ghanshyam, Yupapin, Preecha, Kenneth, T. V. Grattan
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Published: Elsevier B.V. 2018
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/84095/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nancom.2018.06.002
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spelling my.utm.840952019-12-16T01:53:43Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/84095/ Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication Youplao, Phichai Pornsuwancharoen, Nithiroth Amiri, I. S. Jalil, M. A. Aziz, Muhammad Safwan Ali, Jalil Singh, Ghanshyam Yupapin, Preecha Kenneth, T. V. Grattan Q Science (General) In this paper, a micro-stereo sensor is proposed using two-identical Panda-ring resonators, which are coupled by jointed drop ports. When light from the identical coherent sources is fed into the system via the input ports, the coupling outputs are obtained at the drop port at the resonant condition. These are mixed signals in the form of stereo signals. By using different input power between the right and left systems, the phase difference generated by the Kerr-Effect in the non-linear medium leads to the shift in the coupling outputs. The shift in the center wavelength is the primary measurement of interest along with coupling crosstalk signals that are also visible at the output. The measurement self-calibration of the two channels is confirmed by the mixed channel signals. In the manipulation, the crosstalk signals can be used to interpret the cross-communication of bio-cells. The crosstalk results have shown the optical crosstalks of ∼2.0 and ∼2.5 dB are calculated and obtained, respectively. The stereo sensor sensitivity of ∼5.70 nmW−1 is noted. Elsevier B.V. 2018 Article PeerReviewed Youplao, Phichai and Pornsuwancharoen, Nithiroth and Amiri, I. S. and Jalil, M. A. and Aziz, Muhammad Safwan and Ali, Jalil and Singh, Ghanshyam and Yupapin, Preecha and Kenneth, T. V. Grattan (2018) Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication. Nano Communication Networks, 17 . pp. 30-35. ISSN 1878-7789 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nancom.2018.06.002
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
Youplao, Phichai
Pornsuwancharoen, Nithiroth
Amiri, I. S.
Jalil, M. A.
Aziz, Muhammad Safwan
Ali, Jalil
Singh, Ghanshyam
Yupapin, Preecha
Kenneth, T. V. Grattan
Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
description In this paper, a micro-stereo sensor is proposed using two-identical Panda-ring resonators, which are coupled by jointed drop ports. When light from the identical coherent sources is fed into the system via the input ports, the coupling outputs are obtained at the drop port at the resonant condition. These are mixed signals in the form of stereo signals. By using different input power between the right and left systems, the phase difference generated by the Kerr-Effect in the non-linear medium leads to the shift in the coupling outputs. The shift in the center wavelength is the primary measurement of interest along with coupling crosstalk signals that are also visible at the output. The measurement self-calibration of the two channels is confirmed by the mixed channel signals. In the manipulation, the crosstalk signals can be used to interpret the cross-communication of bio-cells. The crosstalk results have shown the optical crosstalks of ∼2.0 and ∼2.5 dB are calculated and obtained, respectively. The stereo sensor sensitivity of ∼5.70 nmW−1 is noted.
format Article
author Youplao, Phichai
Pornsuwancharoen, Nithiroth
Amiri, I. S.
Jalil, M. A.
Aziz, Muhammad Safwan
Ali, Jalil
Singh, Ghanshyam
Yupapin, Preecha
Kenneth, T. V. Grattan
author_facet Youplao, Phichai
Pornsuwancharoen, Nithiroth
Amiri, I. S.
Jalil, M. A.
Aziz, Muhammad Safwan
Ali, Jalil
Singh, Ghanshyam
Yupapin, Preecha
Kenneth, T. V. Grattan
author_sort Youplao, Phichai
title Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
title_short Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
title_full Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
title_fullStr Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
title_full_unstemmed Microring stereo sensor model using Kerr-Vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
title_sort microring stereo sensor model using kerr-vernier effect for bio-cell sensor and communication
publisher Elsevier B.V.
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/84095/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nancom.2018.06.002
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score 13.211869