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Ultrafast Laser Inscribed Waveguides on Chalcogenide Glasses for Photonic ApplicationsSabapathy, Tamilarasan January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Chalcogenide glasses are highly nonlinear optical materials which can be used for fabricating active and passive photonic devices. This thesis work deals with the fabrication of buried, three dimensional, channel waveguides in chalcogenide glasses, using ultrafast laser inscription technique.
The femtosecond laser pulses are focused into rare earth ions doped and undoped chalcogenide glasses, few hundred microns below from the surface to modify the physical properties such as refractive index, density, etc. These changes are made use in the fabrication of active and passive photonic waveguides which have applications in integrated optics.
The first chapter provides an introduction to the fundamental aspects of femtosecond laser inscription, laser interaction with matter and chalcogenide glasses for photonic applications. The advantages and applications of chalcogenide glasses are also described. Motivation and overview of the present thesis work have been discussed at the end.
The methods of chalcogenide glass preparation, waveguide fabrication and characterization of the glasses investigated are described in the second chapter. Also, the details of the experiments undertaken, namely, loss (passive insertion loss) and gain measurements (active) and nanoindentation studies are outlined.
Chapter three presents a study on the effect of net fluence on waveguide formation. A heat diffusion model has been used to solve the waveguide cross-section. The waveguide formation in GeGaS chalcogenide glasses using the ultrafast laser, has been analyzed in the light of a finite element thermal diffusion model. The relation between the net fluence and waveguide cross section diameter has been verified using the experimentally measured properties and theoretically predicted values.
Chapter four presents a study on waveguide fabrication on Er doped Chalcogenide glass. The active and passive characterization is done and the optimal waveguide fabrication parameters are given, along with gain properties for Er doped GeGaS glass. A C-band waveguide amplifier has been demonstrated on Chalcogenide glasses using ultrafast laser inscription technique.
A study on the mechanical properties of the waveguide, undertaken using the nanoindentation technique, is presented in the fifth chapter. This work brings out the close relation between the change in mechanical properties such as elastic modulus and hardness of the material under the irradiation of ultrafast laser after the waveguide formation. Also, a threshold value of the modulus and hardness for characterizing the modes of the waveguide is suggested.
Finally, the chapter six provides a summary of work undertaken and also discusses the future work to be carried out.
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Analysis and Design of Infrared Fiber Bundles for Large Field-of-View Thermal ImagingLopez-Zelaya, Cesar A 01 January 2021 (has links)
During the DARPA SCENICC program, J. Ford, et al., demonstrated that CFBs provide a compelling route to compact, wide angle imagers. Monocentric lenses readily provide diffraction-limited images over wide field but onto a hemispherically curved image surface. They demonstrated visible CFBs can be tapered, cut and polished to relay curved images to flat sensors. We have shown that this provides a volumetric imaging efficiency a hundredfold larger than bulk optics can produce; a hundred times the resolution in the same volume or a hundred times less volume for the same resolution. Ford's work leveraged commercial fiber bundles available for the visible spectrum based on silica. We have developed hybrid fiber bundles using step-index confinement between chalcogenide glass cores and polymer cladding with high index-contrast. The high contrast is necessary to provide tight confinement to the high-index As-Se core with minimal crosstalk between closely spaced cores. Tight confinement also minimizes absorption losses in the PEI polymer cladding. The high contrast of this system also provides a large NA to optimize coupling into the CFB from fast lenses. We introduce disorder into the core radius as a mechanism to further decouple adjacent cores, reduce crosstalk and increase fill-factor. We present coupled-mode theory, modal crosstalk superposition, and finite-element modelling to quantify coupling losses and crosstalk as a function of geometry and disorder. We fabricated preforms, drew small fiber bundles and characterized optical properties of the bundles to aid scale-up to megapixel MWIR CFBs.
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Optical properties in chalcogenide glasses and their temperaturedependence. : Literary survey and experiments.Karlsson, Matilda, Khaled Ali, Saifallah, Lundqvist, Erik, Löthman Ybo, Ask, Sigås, Kalle, Törnquist, Oscar January 2023 (has links)
This study aimed to investigate methods for determining the temperature dependence of the refractive index and absorption of IR-transparent materials through literary studies and experimental tests. Results from the experimental trials were hard to obtain due to the inherent difficulty of measuring optical properties and yielded only temperature trends of transmittance and reflectance. Despite this, the results could be used for speculation regarding the temperature dependency of the refractive index and the absorption which provides insights into the optical properties of a material. There are several suggestions to improve measurements using this method for future work to be able to determine precise values of the properties. Two additional methods have been reviewed with a literary study, the minimum deviation prism method and the improved Swanepoel thin film method. Both methods are regarded as promising candidates for determining refractive index and its temperature dependence with good accuracy. However, the improved Swanepoel method stands out as the more promising candidate. The determination of absorption and its temperature dependence is established to be inherently hard to determine with the experimental method and the two researched methods, thus suggestions for measuring the absorption in future work are given.
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Distribution of Laser Induced Heating in Multi-Component Chalcogenide Glass and its Associated EffectsSisken, Laura 01 January 2014 (has links)
Chalcogenide glasses are well known to have good transparency into the infrared spectrum. These glasses though tend to have low thresholds as compared to oxide glasses for photo-induced changes and thermally-induced changes. Material modification such as photo-induced darkening, bleaching, refractive index change, densification or expansion, ablation of crystallization have been demonstrated, and are typically induced by a thermal furnace-based heat treatment, an optical source such as a laser, or a combination of photo-thermal interactions. Solely employing laser-based heating has an advantage over a furnace, since one has the potential to be able to spatially modify the materials properties with much greater precision by moving either the beam or the sample. The main properties of ChG glasses investigated in this study were the light-induced and thermally-induced modification of the glass through visible microscopy, white light interferometry, and Raman spectroscopy. Additionally computational models were developed in order to aid in determining what temperature rise should be occurring under the conditions used in experiments. It was seen that ablation, photo-expansion, crystallization, and melting could occur for some of the irradiation conditions that were used. The above bandgap energy simulations appeared to overestimate the maximum temperature that should have been reached in the sample, while the below bandgap energy simulations appeared to underestimate the maximum temperature that should have been reached in the sample. Ultimately, this work produces the ground work to be able to predict and control dose, and therefore heating, to induce localized crystallization and phase change.
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Metal Modified Ge-Se Glass Films and Their Potential for Nanodipole Junctionless PhotovoltaicsJunaghadwala, Sakina Mohsin January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Photo And Thermal Induced Studies On Sb/As2S3 Multilayered And (As2S3)1-xSbx Thin FilmsNaik, Ramakanta 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Chalcogenide glasses have attracted considerable attention due to their infrared
transparency, low phonon energy, and high non linear optical properties. They have been
explored as promising candidate for optical memories, gratings, switching devices etc.
Because of their low phonon energy and high refractive indices, now a days these are used for high efficiency fibre amplifiers. Nevertheless, the availability of amorphous
semiconductors in the form of high quality multilayers provides potential applications in the field of micro and optoelectronics. Among amorphous multilayers, chalcogenide
multilayers are attractive because of the prominent photoinduced effects. Studies in
chalcogenide amorphous multilayer have been directed towards two phenomena. One is
photoinduced interdiffusion in short period multilayer systems which finds potential
applications in holographic recording and fabrication of phase gratings . The other is photo darkening or photobleaching which is also known in thick films. These multilayers exhibit prominent photoinduced effects, similar to those exhibited by uniform thin films. In spite of its practical usefulness, the mechanism of photoinduced interdiffusion is not properly understood. Since most structural transformations are related to atomic diffusion, understanding of the structural transformation must be based on the diffusion process.
The main aim of this thesis is to study the photoinduced diffusion in Sb/As2S3
multilayered films and (As2S3)1-xSbx thin films. In literature, there are reports about the
photoinduced interdiffusion in Se/As2S3 and Bi/As2S3 multilayered films, but the
mechanisms of photoinduced interdiffusion of these elements are not very clear. Raman
scattering and infrared spectroscopy techniques have been used to study the photoinduced
interdiffusion in Se/As2S3 and Bi/As2S3 multilayered films by Malyovanik et al.
(M. Malyovanik, M. Shiplyak, V. Cheresnya, T. Remeta, S. Ivan, and A. Kikineshi, J.
Optoelectron. Adv. Mater. 5, 397 (2003). But many questions remain unanswered. The
characteristic spectra of components in the multilayer and those of the diffused layer were rather similar. In the present thesis, photoinduced interdiffusion in Sb/As2S3 multilayered samples are studied by Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) at room and low temperature and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The photoinduced effects in (As2S3)1-xSbx thin films are studied by FTIR, XPS and Raman Spectroscopy. The detailed information about the distribution of electronic states in the absorption edge, localized states and the new bonds formed between the components due to photoinduced interdiffusion elucidated from the above studies will give more insight into the mechanism and kinetics of photoinduced interdiffusion. The thesis consists of seven chapters. References are given at the end of each chapter.
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Laser Brillouin à fibre microstructurée en verre de chaleogénure / Brillouin laser made of microstructured chalcogenide fiberHey Tow, Kenny 14 February 2013 (has links)
Souvent considéré néfaste dans le domaine de la télécommunication car il limite la puissance d'un système de transmission optique, l'effet Brillouin peut être utilisé pour la réalisation de lasers. Un laser à fibre Brillouin peut potentiellement être très cohérent et très peu bruité ; ce qui incite son utilisation dans plusieurs domaines incluant la défense, la métrologie et les télécommunications. L'objectif de cette thèse, qui s'insert dans le cadre du projet ATOS (Antenne acoustique en technologie Tout Optique pour la Surveillance), est d'obtenir un laser Brillouin à la fois compact et avec un seuil laser relativement bas. Pour respecter ces deux conditions, il est nécessaire de disposer d'une fibre avec un très fort coefficient de gain Brillouin gB et ayant une très petite aire effective de manière à concentrer la puissance optique dans le cœur de la fibre. Nous avons ainsi choisi d'utiliser une fibre faite à partir de verres en chalcogénure, qui ont un gB de deux ordres de grandeurs supérieures au gB d'une fibre monomode silice classique avec une microstructure dans le coeur. Ces travaux de recherche contribuent donc, d'une part, à démontrer qu'il est expérimentalement possible de réaliser des lasers Brillouin compacts, bas seuils et exhibant des caractéristiques remarquables en termes de bruit et de cohérence avec des fibres microstructurées en verre de chalcogénure et, d'autre part, à étudier la potentialité de ces cavités lasers dans le cadre du projet ATOS tout en proposant d'autres applications possibles pour la métrologie, l'instrumentation et les télécommunications. / Although stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) in optical fiber is a penalizing nonlinear effect in optical communication systems, it is possible to make good use of SBS in other applications such as in Brillouin fiber lasers (BFLs). A BFL can potentially have a very narrow linewidth and very low relative intensity noise (RIN) and frequency noise, making them excellent coherent laser sources that can be used in telecommunications, defense and metrology. The goal of this research work, which is in the framework of ATOS (Antenne acoustique en technologie Tout Optique pour la Surveillance, All Optical Acoustic Antenna for Security) project, is to obtain a compact Brillouin laser with a very low threshold power. In order to match these two conditions, it is essential to use a fiber with a very high Brillouin gain coefficient gB and with a small effective mode area to ensure a stronger light confinement in the fiber core. For this research work, we have combined both alternatives by using a microstructured optical fiber made of chalcogenide glass. These materials are known to have very high gB, which can be two orders of magnitudes higher than in the case of a standard silica fiber. In this work, we have, first of all, experimentally demonstrated that it is possible to obtain a compact, low threshold and low noise Brillouin laser using microstructured chalcogenide fibers. Then, we have studied the feasibility of using this laser cavity in the framework of the ATOS project while proposing alternative applications for metrology and telecommunications.
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Méthodologie et problématiques de construction du diagnostic médical par spectroscopie infrarouge en ondes évanescentes / Methodology and problems of construction of medical diagnosis by evanescent infrared spectroscopyLe Corvec, Maëna 18 November 2016 (has links)
Des fibres optiques en verres de chalcogénure transmettant dans le moyen infrarouge (MIR) ont été développées par le laboratoire Verres et Céramiques de l’université de Rennes 1. Des travaux ont ensuite montré les potentialités de ces fibres comme outil diagnostic pour la spectroscopie MIR appliquée aux biofluides. Le spectre moyen infrarouge d’un échantillon complexe est le reflet de sa composition moléculaire qui, lorsque celui-ci est un biofluide, peut être assimilé à une image métabolique instantanée d’un individu. Cette technique constitue donc un outil intéressant pour le diagnostic médical. La société Diafir fut crée à la suite du programme ANR émergence FIR-MED pour développer les potentialités de la spectroscopie par fibre optique. L’objectif de l’entreprise est de développer un système composé d’un spectromètre spécifiquement adapté au capteur à fibre optique et d’un algorithme associé pour une réponse diagnostique ne nécessitant pas de connaissance particulière en spectroscopie infrarouge. Dans le cadre de ces travaux de thèse associant l’IRDL et la société Diafir, des projets variés d’applications médicales de la technologie ont été abordés avec pour objectif de développer une méthodologie d’analyse des spectres MIR. Pour cela, il a été nécessaire dans un premier temps de caractériser le signal obtenu à partir des capteurs et d’optimiser et valider des protocoles de mesure applicables aux différents biofluides de manière à réduire au mieux les sources de variabilité d’ordre physique et environnemental. La construction d’un diagnostic médical à partir de spectres infrarouge qui sont des données en grande dimension implique de sélectionner un petit nombre de variables spectrales explicatives. Des méthodes de sélection de variables ont été sélectionnées afin d’éviter l’effet « boite noire » en établissant le lien avec les fonctions biochimiques impactées par les pathologies. Cette approche spectrale infrarouge a notamment permis de mettre en évidence, au cours du développement de pathologies, l’existence de transitions a priori non détectées par les dosages biochimiques classiques. / Chalcogenide glass optical fibres exhibiting unique properties of mid-infrared (MIR) transparency have been developed by the Laboratoire Verres et Céramiques of Rennes 1 University. Our studies investigate the potential of such fibres as a tool for MIR spectroscopy applied to biofluids based diagnostic. The MIR spectrum of complex samples features its molecular composition which, when a biofluid is considered, can be assimilate to an instant metabolic imaging of an individual. The Diafir Company was created following the ANR emergence FIR-MED program to develop the potential of optical fibre biomedical spectroscopy. The company's goal is to develop a system that is composed of the optical fibre sensor, a spectrometer specifically designed to these sensors and an associated algorithm for a diagnostic response without specific knowledge of infrared spectroscopy. As part of this thesis work, linking the IRDL and the Diafir Company, various projects of biomedical applications were driven with the aim of developing a MIR spectra analysis methodology. Accordingly, it was necessary initially to characterize the signal obtained from the sensors and to optimize and validate robust measurement protocols for each biofluid tested with the aim to reduce the physical and environmental sources of variability. The medical diagnosis construction from infrared spectra, that are high dimensional data, involves selecting from the whole spectral data set a small number of explanatory variables. Purposely, particular variables selection algorithms were selected to avoid the effect of "black box" by establishing the link with the biochemical functions affected by the disease. This infrared spectral approach allowed identifying previously unrevealed transitions in the time course of pathologies which were not detected from conventional biochemical markers
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Investigation of Optical Effects of Chalcogenide Glass in Precision Glass Molding and Applications on Infrared Micro Optical ManufacturingZhang, Lin January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Fiber Based Mode Locked Fiber Laser Using Kerr EffectWang, Long 17 May 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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