A focusing optical phased array for tissue interrogation with side-lobe suppression and simplified beam steering
Pedram Hosseini, Alireza Tabatabaei Mashayekh, Prachi Agrawal, Yuntian Ding, Alvaro Moscoso M\'artir, Rebecca Rodrigo, Sandra Johnen, Florian Merget, Jeremy Witzens

TL;DR
This paper presents an integrated optical phased array with side-lobe suppression and simplified beam steering for precise tissue interrogation, enabling targeted cellular stimulation with reduced off-target effects.
Contribution
The work introduces a compact, integrated photonic device with enhanced side-lobe suppression and efficient beam steering capabilities for biomedical applications.
Findings
Achieved transverse focusing with 1-2 μm spot size targeting single cells.
Demonstrated side-lobe suppression to about 11.5% of power, with potential for further reduction.
Enabled beam steering with angles up to ±5.1°, axial translation of 204 μm, and wavelength tuning for longitudinal steering.
Abstract
We implement an integrated multi-electrode array on a silicon-nitride-based photonic integrated circuit for ex-vivo retinal characterization via optical stimulation. The interrogation beam formers, based on curved grating emitters and optical phased arrays, are designed to achieve transverse focusing with spot sizes in the 1 - 2 m range to target single cells. The experimentally realized focusing optical phased arrays show suppressed side-lobes, with approximately 11.5% of the power in each side-lobe and ~60% in the main lobe, reducing unintentional cellular excitation. Additional design refinement enables further suppression of the side-lobes to a few percent of the total power. Additionally, we demonstrate a compact design of meandered thermal phase shifters implemented across the array that allow push-pull steering in the transverse direction as well as focusing and defocusing…
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