Spectral and spatial filtering of whispering gallery modes in precision-engineered microbubble resonators
Ramgopal Madugani, Amal Jose, Christophe Pin, Metin Ozer, Martina Hentschel, S\'ile Nic Chormaic

TL;DR
This paper presents a method to improve mode filtering in microbubble resonators through geometric modifications, enhancing their sensing capabilities and spectral tuning.
Contribution
The authors designed and fabricated surface geometric filters on microbubbles to reduce mode mixing and enable high-Q, tunable whispering gallery modes for sensing applications.
Findings
Fabricated surface dips and holes effectively filter modes.
Achieved partial recovery of high Q-factors with slit patterns.
Demonstrated pressure sensing and spectral tuning free from mode-mixing.
Abstract
Similar to microspheres, thin-walled microbubble resonators support whispering gallery modes (WGMs) that combine ultrahigh Q-factors and small effective mode volumes. In contrast, their hollow nature enables enhanced interactions with encapsulated materials and lower spectral mode density due to the tight radial confinement of the optical modes. However, the existence of a high axial-mode density still leads to significant mode mixing and modal interference that can complicate spectral shift measurements, thereby limiting sensing applications. To address this limitation, we have fabricated geometric filters directly on the surface of microbubbles using focused ion beam (FIB) milling. Based on numerical calculations, we first designed and then fabricated large tapered patterns, such as circular surface dips or holes, that could effectively filter modes while minimizing optical scattering…
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