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Deposition and Characterization of silicon oxynitride material for the fabrication of optical waveguidesNaskar, Sudipto January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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Mesoporous thin-film materials studied by optical waveguide spectroscopyPeic, Antun January 2009 (has links)
A method was developed to access the interior of light-guiding structures in order to exploit the enhanced sensing potential of the highly confined electromagnetic field distributions, located within the core of a waveguide. The work presented in this thesis explores therefore the possibilities of optical waveguide spectroscopy utilising transparent mesoporous thin-film waveguides deposited on top of athin gold layer. These multi-layer assemblies are employed in a prism-coupling attenuated total internal reflection (ATR) configuration. The angular read-out of the reflected light intensity allows label-free detection schemes with high sensitivity to changes of the dielectric environment in the case of the presence of analyte molecules within the probing region. This optical waveguide spectroscopy technique has been used to study the real-timediffusion of Ruthenium 535-bisTBA (N-719) dye into mesoporous nanocrystalline titaniumdioxide films. The porous films were prepared on top of gold substrates and prism coupling was used to create a guided wave in the nanocrystalline film. Dying was carried out by bring the film into contact with a 3 x 10-4 moldm-3 dye solution and using optical waveguide spectroscopy to monitor the change in both the refractive index and theextinction coefficient of the nanoporous layer as dye diffused into the porous network. Dyeuptake in a 1.27 μm film was slow with the refractive index of the film still increasing after 22 hours.
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Biochemical sensing using Siloxane polymer waveguidesRacz, Gergely Zsigmond January 2019 (has links)
The objective of this work presented here is to extend the capabilities of siloxane waveguide technology in the field of biochemical sensing. Recent advances in the integration of polymeric optical waveguides with electronics onto standard printed circuit boards (PCBs) allow the formation of cost-effective lab-on-achip modules suitable for mass production. This technology has been primarily designed for on-board data communication. The focus of this research is to investigate the possibility of realising a Siloxane polymer based lab-on-chip sensor. Different siloxane-polymer-based optical waveguide sensor structures have been designed and analysed from the aspect of biochemical sensing. An evanescent-wave absorption sensor based on mode-selective asymmetric waveguide junctions is proposed for the first time. The device mitigates the common optical effect of spurious response in absorption sensors due to the analyte transport fluid. Head injury is the leading cause of death in the population of people under 40 years. Currently, 3 out of 5 deaths in emergency rooms are due to severe brain injuries in the developed world. Researchers at the Neurosciences Critical Care Unit (NCCU) at Addenbrooke's Hospital have managed to correlate biochemical changes with the severeness of the injury and the likelihood of patient recovery. Considerable progress has been made to develop a lab-on-chip sensor capable of continuously monitoring glucose, lactate and pyruvate concentrations in the brain fluid, hence the contribution to the current trend in the advancement of portable lab-on-chip technologies for the deployment of point-of-care diagnostic tools. A novel recognition layer has been developed based on porphyrin in combination with glucose, lactate and pyruvate oxidase for measuring all the analytes, enabling fast and reversible chemical reactions to be monitored by optical interrogation. The operational wavelength of the developed recognition layer is 425 nm, which required the formation of polymer features that were beyond the fabrication capabilities at the time. Through considerable process development and the adoption of nanoimprinting lithography, siloxane polymer based optical waveguides were fabricated allowing the realisation of highly sensitive optical sensors. Based on the results that are presented here, it can be concluded the functionalization of siloxane polymer waveguide have a potential for realising biochemical sensors in the future. The new fabrication technique will allow the formation of more robust and complex lab-on-chip sensors based on this material.
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The Study of All-optical Nonlinear Waveguide DevicesTasy, Rong-Zhan 01 August 2003 (has links)
In the paper, the beam propagation method is used to analyze the characteristics and the applications of nonlinear optical waveguide structures. The nonlinear optical waveguide is a medium whose refractive index changes with the electric field intensity. Based on the mode theory, the propagating envelop of optical light waves in the three-layers nonlinear waveguide with the nonlinear cladding, the nonlinear substrate and the linear guiding film can be solved. Not only the dispersion relation curve is described, but also the affection of input power to the electric field distribution is observed.
In the application of nonlinear optical waveguide structure, the three-layers nonlinear waveguide structure and the local nonlinear Mach-Zehnder waveguide interferometer structure will be discussed: In the three-layers nonlinear waveguide structure, by launching the symmetric and antisymmetric modes, various characteristics of spatial optical solitons will be observed. Based on the interaction property between spatial optical solitons, a new all-optical 1¡ÑN switching device will be proposed; In the local nonlinear Mach-Zehnder waveguide interferometer structure, by fixing the input signal power and changing the control power, output signal beam will show the switching property. Besides, by changing the local nonlinear distributions, the nonlinear Mach-Zehnder interferometer will show various logic functions. The numerical results show that the proposed structures could function as all-optical switch devices and all-optical logic gates.
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Optoelectronic packaging and reliability of intra- and inter-board level guided-wave optical interconnectionChoi, Jin Ho, 1968- 04 November 2013 (has links)
We have demonstrated a flexible optical waveguide film with integrated VCSEL and PIN photodiode arrays for the fully embedded board level optical interconnection system. One of the most critical issues in the fully embedded board level optical interconnection system is the signal beam coupling between the guided-wave structure and the aperture of VCSEL (or PIN photodiode). The coupling efficiencies of spherical mirrors are calculated as a function of mirror radius. The optimum mirror radius ranges which are compatible with the fully embedded board level optical interconnection system are theoretically verified. The thermal characteristics of a thin film VCSEL are studied both theoretically and experimentally. The thermal resistances of VCSEL with variable thickness, ranging from 10 [mu]m to 200 [mu]m, have been determined by measuring the output wavelength shift as a function of the dissipated power. The thermal simulation results agree reasonably well with experimentally measured data. From the thermal management point of view, a thinned VCSEL has an exclusive advantage due to the reduction of the thermal resistance. The thermal resistance of 10 [mu]m thick VCSEL is 40 % lower than that of 200 [mu]m thick VCSEL. The theoretical analysis of thermal via effects is performed to determine optimized thickness ranges of thin film VCSEL for the fully embedded structure. Thermal resistance of the fully embedded thin film VCSEL with closed and open thermal via structures are also evaluated with the suitable VCSEL thickness reported. The high-performance computing system is demonstrated using a 16-channel optical backplane using thin film volume holographic gratings. The optical backplane contains TO-46-Can-packaged VCSELs and photodiodes as an optical transmitter and receiver, respectively. Optical packaging plates are fabricated for 4 X 8 array packaging for 16-VCSELs and 16-Photodiodes. Packaging issues including crosstalk and alignment tolerance are studied to design a low cost optical packaging scheme. Thin film volume hologram grating is fabricated on glass substrate to redirect light beams. An individual single channel performs at a 100 MHz data transfer rate. The high-performance computing system using 16-channel optical backplane is demonstrated at a 1.6 Gbps data transmission. / text
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Femtosecond Laser Microfabrication of Optofluidic Lab-on-a-chip with Selective Chemical EtchingHo, Stephen 20 June 2014 (has links)
The three-dimensional (3-D) writing capability of a high repetition rate (1 MHz) fiber-amplified femtosecond laser with a wavelength of 522 nm was harnessed together with wet-chemical etching for laser-patterning of 3-D optofluidic microsystems in fused silica glass, by the method of Femtosecond Laser Irradiation followed by Chemical Etching (FLICE). Selective chemical etching of laser irradiated glass with dilute hydrofluoric acid (HF) enabled micro-fabrication of high aspect-ratio embedded micro-channels and fine-period 3-D glass meshes in a 3-D inverted woodpile (IWP) arrangement that permitted high density lab-on-a-chip (LOC) integration of flow channels, reservoirs, glass chromatography columns, and optical circuit devices. Optical waveguides, reservoirs, micro-channels, and IWP structures were first laser patterned and followed by selective wet etching controlled by the polarization orientation of the writing laser. With the laser polarization perpendicular to the scanning direction, the volume nanogratings were aligned perpendicular to glass surfaces to facilitate HF etching and thus created designer shaped micro-channels with the smoothest sidewall surfaces measured at present and terminated with open reservoirs. An array of vertical access holes spaced periodically apart facilitated etching of continuous and highly uniform buried channels of unrestricted length in the glass to interconnect flow channels and reservoirs. Alternatively, laser polarization parallel to the scan direction provided low-loss optical waveguides with nanograting walls resisting the acid etching, providing a convenient one-step laser scanning process of optofluidic microsystems prior to wet etching. For the first time, dual-channel capillary electrophoresis was demonstrated by simultaneous fluorescent detection of separating dyes in a 3-D microsystem having over- and under-passing crossed channels in fused silica. In addition, an on-chip particle counting device based on capillary force to drive analytes through an embedded micro-channel into a calibrated reservoir for particle counting was designed and demonstrated. Further, a new type of glass mesh structure is presented where a 3-D IWP micro-channel array with diamond-like symmetry was integrated inside a micro-channel for capillary electrophoretic chromatography. The FLICE technique thus enables rapid prototyping of fully integrated 3-D optofluidic systems in bulk fused silica glasses for numerous applications, and these provide the groundwork and open new 3-D design approaches for advanced microsystems in the future.
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Femtosecond Laser Microfabrication of Optofluidic Lab-on-a-chip with Selective Chemical EtchingHo, Stephen 20 June 2014 (has links)
The three-dimensional (3-D) writing capability of a high repetition rate (1 MHz) fiber-amplified femtosecond laser with a wavelength of 522 nm was harnessed together with wet-chemical etching for laser-patterning of 3-D optofluidic microsystems in fused silica glass, by the method of Femtosecond Laser Irradiation followed by Chemical Etching (FLICE). Selective chemical etching of laser irradiated glass with dilute hydrofluoric acid (HF) enabled micro-fabrication of high aspect-ratio embedded micro-channels and fine-period 3-D glass meshes in a 3-D inverted woodpile (IWP) arrangement that permitted high density lab-on-a-chip (LOC) integration of flow channels, reservoirs, glass chromatography columns, and optical circuit devices. Optical waveguides, reservoirs, micro-channels, and IWP structures were first laser patterned and followed by selective wet etching controlled by the polarization orientation of the writing laser. With the laser polarization perpendicular to the scanning direction, the volume nanogratings were aligned perpendicular to glass surfaces to facilitate HF etching and thus created designer shaped micro-channels with the smoothest sidewall surfaces measured at present and terminated with open reservoirs. An array of vertical access holes spaced periodically apart facilitated etching of continuous and highly uniform buried channels of unrestricted length in the glass to interconnect flow channels and reservoirs. Alternatively, laser polarization parallel to the scan direction provided low-loss optical waveguides with nanograting walls resisting the acid etching, providing a convenient one-step laser scanning process of optofluidic microsystems prior to wet etching. For the first time, dual-channel capillary electrophoresis was demonstrated by simultaneous fluorescent detection of separating dyes in a 3-D microsystem having over- and under-passing crossed channels in fused silica. In addition, an on-chip particle counting device based on capillary force to drive analytes through an embedded micro-channel into a calibrated reservoir for particle counting was designed and demonstrated. Further, a new type of glass mesh structure is presented where a 3-D IWP micro-channel array with diamond-like symmetry was integrated inside a micro-channel for capillary electrophoretic chromatography. The FLICE technique thus enables rapid prototyping of fully integrated 3-D optofluidic systems in bulk fused silica glasses for numerous applications, and these provide the groundwork and open new 3-D design approaches for advanced microsystems in the future.
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光学式マイクロ三軸触覚センサの試作大岡, 昌博, OHKA, Masahiro, 東岡, 制, HIGASHIOKA, Isamu, 壁下, 寿登, KABESHITA, Hisanori, 三矢, 保永, MITSUYA, Yasunaga 10 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Storage, Interference and Mechanical Effects of Single Photons in Coupled Optical CavitiesMirza, Imran 17 October 2014 (has links)
We study different phenomena associated with single-photon propagation in optical cavities coupled through optical fibers. We first address the issue of storing and delaying single-photon wavepackets in an array of microcavities. This has possible applications in developing reliable and efficient quantum repeaters that will be utilized
in building long distance quantum networks. Second, we investigate a Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) type of interference between two photons that are produced in two coupled atom-cavity systems. The HOM effect in this setup can test the degree of indistinguishability between photons when they are stored inside cavities. This part of the dissertation also includes the study of entanglement between atoms, cavities and atom-cavity systems induced by the photons. Finally, we focus on single-photon interactions with a tiny movable mirror in the context of quantum optomechanics. We investigate how the mechanical motion of the mirror leaves its imprints on the optical spectrum of the photon
This dissertation includes previously published and unpublished co-authored material. / 10000-01-01
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Analysis of optical waveguide fabrication processesMehrotra, Sandeep January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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