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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

Computational Imaging Systems for High-speed, Adaptive Sensing Applications

Sun, Yangyang 01 January 2019 (has links)
Driven by the advances in signal processing and ubiquitous availability of high-speed low-cost computing resources over the past decade, computational imaging has seen the growing interest. Improvements on spatial, temporal, and spectral resolutions have been made with novel designs of imaging systems and optimization methods. However, there are two limitations in computational imaging. 1), Computational imaging requires full knowledge and representation of the imaging system called the forward model to reconstruct the object of interest. This limits the applications in the systems with a parameterized unknown forward model such as range imaging systems. 2), the regularization in the optimization process incorporates strong assumptions which may not accurately reflect the a priori distribution of the object. To overcome these limitations, we propose 1) novel optimization frameworks for applying computational imaging on active and passive range imaging systems and achieve 5-10 folds improvement on temporal resolution in various range imaging systems; 2) a data-driven method for estimating the distribution of high dimensional objects and a framework of adaptive sensing for maximum information gain. The adaptive strategy with our proposed method outperforms Gaussian process-based method consistently. The work would potentially benefit high-speed 3D imaging applications such as autonomous driving and adaptive sensing applications such as low-dose adaptive computed tomography(CT).
142

Novel Solid State Lasers Based on Volume Bragg Gratings

Hale, Evan 01 January 2019 (has links)
Since their invention in 1960, lasers have revolutionized modern technology, and tremendous amounts of innovation and development has gone into advancing their properties and efficiencies. This dissertation reports on further innovations by presenting novel solid state laser systems based on the volume Bragg gratings (VBGs) and the newly developed holographic phase mask (HPMs) for brightness enhancement, dual wavelength operation, and mode conversion. First, a new optical element was created by pairing the HPM with two surface gratings creating an achromatic holographic phase mask. This new optical device successfully performed transverse mode conversion of multiple narrow line laser sources operating from 488 to 1550 nm and a broadband mode locked femtosecond source with no angular tuning. Also, two types of HPMs were tested on high power Yb fiber lasers to demonstrate high energy mode conversion. Secondly, the effects of implementing VBGs for brightness enhancement of passively Q-switched systems with large Fresnel numbers was investigated. Implementing VBGs for angular mode selection allowed for higher pulse energies to be extracted without sacrificing brightness and pulse duration. This technique could potentially be applied to construct compact cavities with 1 cm diameter beams and nearly diffraction limited beam quality. Lastly, a spectral beam combining approach was applied to create Tm3+ and Yb3+ based narrowband dual-wavelength pump sources for terahertz generation, using VBGs as frequency selectors and beam combiners. Comparison of pulse duration and synchronization was done between passive and active Q-switching operation. An experimental set up for THz generation and detection using high sensitive detectors was created, and modeling of terahertz conversion efficiencies were done
143

Cryogenic Performance Projections for Ultra-small Oxide-free Vertical-cavity Surface-emitting Lasers

Bayat, Mina 01 January 2019 (has links)
Small-sized vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) may offer very low power consumption along with high reliability for cryogenic data transfer. Cryogenic data transfer has application in supercomputers and superconducting for efficient computing and also focal plane array cameras operating at 77 K, and at the lower temperature of 4 K for data extraction from superconducting circuits. A theoretical analysis is presented for 77 K and 4 K operation based on small cavity, oxide-free VCSEL sizes of 2 to 6 µm, that have been shown to operate efficiently at room temperature. Temperature dependent operation for optimally-designed VCSELs are studied by calculating the response of the laser at 77 K and 4 K to estimate their bias conditions needed to reach modulation speed for cryogenic optical links. The temperature influence is to decrease threshold for reducing temperature, and to increase differential gain for reducing temperature. The two effects predict very low bias currents for small cavity VCSELs to reach needed data speed for cryogenic optical data links. Projections are made for different cavity structures (half-wave cavity and full-wave cavity) shown that half-wave cavity structure has better performance. Changing the number of top-mirror pairs has also been studied to determine how cavity design impacts speed and bit energy. Our design and performance predictions paves the way for realizing highly efficient, ultra-small VCSEL arrays with applications in optical interconnects.
144

High-dynamic-range Foveated Near-eye Display System

Tan, Guanjun 01 January 2019 (has links)
Wearable near-eye display has found widespread applications in education, gaming, entertainment, engineering, military training, and healthcare, just to name a few. However, the visual experience provided by current near-eye displays still falls short to what we can perceive in the real world. Three major challenges remain to be overcome: 1) limited dynamic range in display brightness and contrast, 2) inadequate angular resolution, and 3) vergence-accommodation conflict (VAC) issue. This dissertation is devoted to addressing these three critical issues from both display panel development and optical system design viewpoints. A high-dynamic-range (HDR) display requires both high peak brightness and excellent dark state. In the second and third chapters, two mainstream display technologies, namely liquid crystal display (LCD) and organic light emitting diode (OLED), are investigated to extend their dynamic range. On one hand, LCD can easily boost its peak brightness to over 1000 nits, but it is challenging to lower the dark state to < 0.01 nits. To achieve HDR, we propose to use a mini-LED local dimming backlight. Based on our simulations and subjective experiments, we establish practical guidelines to correlate the device contrast ratio, viewing distance, and required local dimming zone number. On the other hand, self-emissive OLED display exhibits a true dark state, but boosting its peak brightness would unavoidably cause compromised lifetime. We propose a systematic approach to enhance OLED's optical efficiency while keeping indistinguishable angular color shift. These findings will shed new light to guide future HDR display designs. In Chapter four, in order to improve angular resolution, we demonstrate a multi-resolution foveated display system with two display panels and an optical combiner. The first display panel provides wide field of view for peripheral vision, while the second panel offers ultra-high resolution for the central fovea. By an optical minifying system, both 4x and 5x enhanced resolutions are demonstrated. In addition, a Pancharatnam-Berry phase deflector is applied to actively shift the high-resolution region, in order to enable eye-tracking function. The proposed design effectively reduces the pixelation and screen-door effect in near-eye displays. The VAC issue in stereoscopic displays is believed to be the main cause of visual discomfort and fatigue when wearing VR headsets. In Chapter five, we propose a novel polarization-multiplexing approach to achieve multiplane display. A polarization-sensitive Pancharatnam-Berry phase lens and a spatial polarization modulator are employed to simultaneously create two independent focal planes. This method enables generation of two image planes without the need of temporal multiplexing. Therefore, it can effectively reduce the frame rate by one-half. In Chapter six, we briefly summarize our major accomplishments.
145

Computational Imaging with Limited Photon Budget

Zhu, Zheyuan 01 January 2019 (has links)
The capability of retrieving the image/signal of interest from extremely low photon flux is attractive in scientific, industrial, and medical imaging applications. Conventional imaging modalities and reconstruction algorithms rely on hundreds to thousands of photons per pixel (or per measurement) to ensure enough signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio for extracting the image/signal of interest. Unfortunately, the potential of radiation or photon damage prohibits high SNR measurements in dose-sensitive diagnosis scenarios. In addition, imaging systems utilizing inherently weak signals as contrast mechanism, such as X-ray scattering-based tomography, or attosecond pulse retrieval from the streaking trace, entail prolonged integration time to acquire hundreds of photons, thus rendering high SNR measurement impractical. This dissertation addresses the problem of imaging from limited photon budget when high SNR measurements are either prohibitive or impractical. A statistical image reconstruction framework based on the knowledge of the image-formation process and the noise model of the measurement system has been constructed and successfully demonstrated on two imaging platforms – photon-counting X-ray imaging, and attosecond pulse retrieval. For photon-counting X-ray imaging, the statistical image reconstruction framework achieves high-fidelity X-ray projection and tomographic image reconstruction from as low as 16 photons per pixel on average. The capability of our framework in modeling the reconstruction error opens the opportunity of designing the optimal strategies to distribute a fixed photon budget for region-of-interest (ROI) reconstruction, paving the way for radiation dose management in an imaging-specific task. For attosecond pulse retrieval, a learning-based framework has been incorporated into the statistical image reconstruction to retrieve the attosecond pulses from the noisy streaking traces. Quantitative study on the required signal-to-noise ratio for satisfactory pulse retrieval enabled by our framework provides a guideline to future attosecond streaking experiments. In addition, resolving the ambiguities in the streaking process due to the carrier envelop phase has also been demonstrated with our statistical reconstruction framework.
146

Broadband Mid-infrared Frequency Combs Generated via Frequency Division

Ru, Qitian 01 January 2019 (has links)
Frequency combs have revolutionized metrology and demonstrated numerous applications in science and technology. Combs operating in the mid-infrared region could be beneficial for molecular spectroscopy for several reasons. First, numerous molecules have their spectroscopic signatures in this region. Furthermore, the atmospheric window (3-5μm and 8-14μm) is located here. Additionally, a mid-infrared frequency comb could be employed as a diagnostic tool for the many components of human breath, as well as for detection of harmful gases and contaminants in the atmosphere. In this thesis, I used synchronously pumped subharmonic optical parametric oscillators (OPOs) operating at degeneracy to produce ultra-broadband outputs near half of the pump laser frequency. One attractive property of the subharmonic OPOs is that the signal/idler waves of the OPO are frequency- and phase-locked to the pump frequency comb. We explored three new nonlinear materials in the subharmonic OPO and demonstrated a broadband spectrum for mid-infrared frequency comb generation. (1) Orientation-patterned (OP) gallium arsenide (GaAs) was selected as the first material because it has high nonlinearity. We found that the OP-GaAs based OPO yielded an approximately two-octave wide spectrum (2.8–11μm). (2) Gallium phosphide (GaP) has near zero group velocity dispersion (GVD) at 4.7 μm and a large bandgap. The OP-GaP OPO yielded a spectrum of more than two octaves (3–12.5μm). Also, because of the large bandgap, GaP is suitable for telecom 1.56-μm pumping, having the advantage of much smaller GVD than in periodically-poled-lithium-niobite (PPLN). The telecom laser (1.56μm) pumped OP-GaP OPO was demonstrated with more than one octave wide spectrum. (3) Finally, we explored the phenomenon of random phase matching in the zinc selenide (ZnSe) polycrystalline material. The first random phase matched OPO was demonstrated with more than one octave spectrum (3.1– 9μm), which is also the first OPO based on ZnSe.
147

Fundamental Properties of Metallic Nanolasers

Hayenga, William 01 January 2019 (has links)
The last two decades have witnessed tremendous advancements in the area of nanophotonics and plasmonics, which has helped propel the development of integrated photonic sources. Of central importance to such circuits is compact, scalable, low threshold, and efficient coherent sources that can be driven at high modulation frequencies. In this regard, metallic nanolasers offer a unique platform. Their introduction has enabled confinement of light at a subwavelength scale and the ultra-small size of the modes afforded by these structures allows for cavity enhancing effects that can help facilitate thresholdless lasing and large direct modulation bandwidths. In this report, I present my work on the study of the fundamental properties of metallic nanolasers. I start with a rate equation model to predict threshold behavior and the modulation response of metallic nanolasers. Next, I explain the second-order coherence measurement setup that was built, based on a modified Hanbury-Brown and Twiss experiment, to assess the intensity autocorrelation of various optically pumped metallic nanolasers. These studies concluded that metallic coaxial and disk-shaped nanolasers are capable of generating truly coherent radiation. Subsequently, design considerations are taken into account for electrically pumped coaxial nanolasers. This has led to the demonstration of electrically injected coaxial and disk-shaped nanolasers at cryogenic temperatures. Lastly, the appearance of collective behaviors in metallic nanolasers lattices is explored. Individually supporting modes that are highly vectorial by nature, when such cavities are fabricated in close proximity to one another, coupling through their overlapping fields results in the formation of a set of supermodes. The tendency of the system to minimize the overall loss leads to each element of the lattice having a geometric dependent field distribution and helps promotes single-mode lasing. We show both through simulations and experimentally that this effect can lead to the direct generation of vector vortices.
148

Processing of Advanced Infrared Materials

Mcgill, Daniel 01 January 2019 (has links)
Infrared transparent glassy and crystalline materials often have unique and complex processing requirements but are an important class of materials for such applications as optical windows, lenses, waveplates, polarizers and beam splitters. This thesis investigates two specific materials, one amorphous and one crystalline, that are candidates for use in the short and midwave-infrared and mid and longwave infrared, respectively. It is demonstrated that an innovative uniaxial sintering process, which uses a sacrificial pressure-transmitting medium, can be used to fully densify a 70TeO2-20WO3-10La2O3 (TWL) glass powder. The characteristics of the sintered TWL glass is compared to that of a parent glass produced through a conventional melt/quench process to ascertain the impact of process-specific property changes on the resulting material. Additionally, the design, construction and characterization of a custom-made transparent Bridgman crystal growth furnace is undertaken to enable growth of highly birefringent tellurium single crystal. The key obstacles that need to be overcome to scale up the size of the grown crystals are summarized with the end goal of producing commercial grade optical elements.
149

Artificial Magnetism and Topological Phenomena in Optics

Parto, Midya 01 January 2019 (has links)
Recent years have witnessed intense research activities to effectively control the flow of photons using various classes of optical structures such as photonic crystals and metamaterials. In this regard, optics has benefited from concepts in condensed matter and solid-state physics, where similar problems concerning electronic wavefunctions arise. An important example of such correspondence is associated with the photon dynamics under the effect of an artificial magnetic field. This is especially important since photons, as neutral bosons, do not inherently interact with magnetic fields. One way to mitigate this issue is to exploit magneto-optical materials. However, as is well known, using such materials comes with several issues in terms of optical losses and fabrication challenges. Therefore, clearly of interest would be to devise certain schemes, which employ conventional dielectric materials, and yet provide an artificial "magnetic field" e.g. through geometric phases imprinted in the photonic wave amplitudes. Here, we utilize such schemes to observe various optical wave phenomena arising from the associated artificial magnetism. First, we show that light propagation dynamics in a twisted multicore optical fiber is governed by the Schrödinger equation in the presence of a magnetic potential. Using this, we experimentally observe Aharonov-Bohm suppression of optical tunneling in these structures. Moreover, we use notions from topological insulators to demonstrate the first dielectric-based topological lasers both in 1- and 2-dimensional lattices of microring resonators. Our measurements show that such laser arrays exhibit significant improvement in terms of robustness against defects and disorder, as well as higher slope efficiencies as compared to conventional laser arrays. Finally, we show both theoretically and experimentally, that the cooperative interplay among vectorial electromagnetic modes in coupled metallic nanolasers can be utilized as a means to emulate the classical XY Hamiltonian. In particular, we discern two phases in these systems, akin to those associated with ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AF) materials.
150

Design and Fabrication of Scalable Multifunctional Multimaterial Fibers and Textiles

Tan, Felix 01 January 2019 (has links)
Multimaterial fibers eschew the traditional mono-material structures typical of traditional optical fibers for novel internal architectures that combine disparate materials with distinct optical, mechanical, and electronic properties, thereby enabling novel optoelectronic functionalities delivered in the form factor of an extended fiber. This new class of fibers developed over the past two decades is attracting interest from researchers in such different fields as optics, textiles, and biomedicine. The juxtaposition of multiple materials integrated at micro- and nanoscales in complex geometries while ensuring intimate smooth interfaces extending continuously for kilometers facilitates unique applications such as non-invasive laser surgery, self-monitoring fibers, e-textiles, and extreme-environment tethers. In this work, I focus on the scalable manufacturing of novel multimaterial fibers that make possible the fabrication of hundreds of kilometers of optical micro-cables and producing fibers at volumes commensurate with the needs of the textile and apparel industry. Although a multiplicity of fabrication schemes exists, I have investigated thermal drawing and melt-extrusion for thermo-forming of multimaterial fibers. Such fibers can be readily integrated with a broad range of downstream processes and techniques, such as textile weaving, precision-winding of fiber micro-cables, and inline functional coating. Specifically, I have developed a hybrid fabrication approach to produce robust optical fibers for single-mode and multi-mode mid-infrared transmission with the added possibility of high-power-handling capability. Second, I describe an optoelectronic fiber in which an electrically conductive composite glass is thermally co-drawn in a transparent glass matrix with a crystalline semiconductor and metallic conductors, which is the first fully integrated thermally drawn optoelectronic fiber making use of a traditional semiconductor. Third, I appropriate the industry-proven system of multicomponent melt-extrusion traditionally utilized for the scalable production of textile yarns and non-woven fabrics to produce our multimaterial fiber structures previously fabricated via thermal drawing. This has enabled melt-spinning of user-controlled color-changing fibers that are subsequently woven into active color-changing fabrics. I additionally report the design and prototyping of structured capacitive fibers for potential integration into advanced functional e-textiles. Finally, I have produced a new class of optical scattering materials based on designer composite microspheres by exploiting a recently discovered capillary instability in multimaterial fibers produced by thermal drawing, multifilament yarn spinning, and melt-extruded non-woven fabrics.

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