Modeling quasi-dark states with Temporal Coupled-Mode Theory
Mario C. M. M. Souza, Guilherme F. M. Rezende, Luis A. M. Barea,, Gustavo S. Wiederhecker, Newton C. Frateschi

TL;DR
This paper identifies a limitation of Temporal Coupled-Mode Theory in predicting dark states in coupled resonators, proposes a correction, and validates it against experimental and numerical methods, enhancing the model's accuracy.
Contribution
The authors reveal a specific limitation of TCMT in modeling dark states and introduce a correction that aligns TCMT predictions with experimental and numerical results.
Findings
TCMT incorrectly predicts dark states in certain coupled resonator systems.
A correction to TCMT improves agreement with experimental and FDTD results.
The correction is based on energy conservation and non-resonant power considerations.
Abstract
Coupled resonators are commonly used to achieve tailored spectral responses and allow novel functionalities in a broad range of applications, from optical modulation and filtering in integrated photonic circuits to the study of nonlinear dynamics in arrays of resonators. The Temporal Coupled-Mode Theory (TCMT) provides a simple and general tool that is widely used to model these devices and has proved to yield very good results in many different systems of low-loss, weakly coupled resonators. Relying on TCMT to model coupled resonators might however be misleading in some circumstances due to the lumped-element nature of the model. In this article, we report an important limitation of TCMT related to the prediction of dark states. Studying a coupled system composed of three microring resonators, we demonstrate that TCMT predicts the existence of a dark state that is in disagreement with…
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