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- Title
- LIQUID CRYSTAL MATERIALS AND TUNABLE DEVICES FOR OPTICAL COMMUNICATIONS.
- Creator
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Du, Fang, Wu, Shin-Tson, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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In this dissertation, liquid crystal materials and devices are investigated in meeting the challenges for photonics and communications applications. The first part deals with polymer-stabilized liquid crystal (PSLC) materials and devices. Three polymer-stabilized liquid crystal systems are developed for optical communications. The second part reports the experimental investigation of a novel liquid-crystal-infiltrated photonic crystal fiber (PCF) and explores its applications in fiber-optic...
Show moreIn this dissertation, liquid crystal materials and devices are investigated in meeting the challenges for photonics and communications applications. The first part deals with polymer-stabilized liquid crystal (PSLC) materials and devices. Three polymer-stabilized liquid crystal systems are developed for optical communications. The second part reports the experimental investigation of a novel liquid-crystal-infiltrated photonic crystal fiber (PCF) and explores its applications in fiber-optic communications. The curing temperature is found to have significant effects on the PSLC performance. The electro-optic properties of nematic polymer network liquid crystal (PNLC) at different curing temperatures are investigated experimentally. At high curing temperature, a high contrast, low drive voltage, and small hysteresis PNLC is obtained as a result of the formed large LC micro-domains. With the help of curing temperature effect, it is able to develop PNLC based optical devices with highly desirable performances for optical communications. Such high performance is generally considered difficult to realize for a PNLC. In fact, the poor performance of PNLC, especially at long wavelengths, has hindered it from practical applications for optical communications for a long time. Therefore, the optimal curing temperature effect discovered in this thesis would enable PSLCs for practical industrial applications. Further more, high birefringence LCs play an important role for near infrared photonic devices. The isothiocyanato tolane liquid crystals exhibit a high birefringence and low viscosity. The high birefringence LC dramatically improves the PSLC contrast ratio while keeping a low drive voltage and fast response time. A free-space optical device by PNLC is experimentally demonstrated and its properties characterized. Most LC devices are polarization sensitive. To overcome this drawback, we have investigated the polymer-stabilized cholesteric LC (PSCLC). Combining the curing temperature effect and high birefringence LC, a polarization independent fiber-optical device is realized with over 30 dB attenuation, ~12 Vrms drive voltage and 11/28 milliseconds (rise/decay) response times. A polymer-stabilized twisted nematic LC (PS TNLC) is also proposed as a variable optical attenuator for optical communications. By using the polarization control system, the device is polarization independent. The polymer network in a PS TNLC not only results in a fast response time (0.9/9 milliseconds for rise/decay respectively), but also removes the backflow effect of TNLC which occurs in the high voltage regime.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2005
- Identifier
- CFE0000485, ucf:46361
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0000485
- Title
- THREE-DIMENSIONAL MICRON-SCALE METAL PHOTONIC CRYSTALS VIA MULTI-PHOTON DIRECT LASER WRITING AND ELECTROLESS METAL DEPOSITION.
- Creator
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Tal, Amir, Kuebler, Stephen, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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Three-dimensional (3D) metal photonic crystals (MPCs) can exhibit interesting electromagnetic properties such as ultra-wide photonic or "plasmonic" band gaps, selectively tailored thermal emission, extrinsically modified absorption, and negative refractive index. Yet, optical-wavelength 3D MPCs remain relatively unexplored due to the challenges posed by their fabrication. This work explores the use of multi-photon direct laser writing (DLW) coupled with electroless metallization as a means...
Show moreThree-dimensional (3D) metal photonic crystals (MPCs) can exhibit interesting electromagnetic properties such as ultra-wide photonic or "plasmonic" band gaps, selectively tailored thermal emission, extrinsically modified absorption, and negative refractive index. Yet, optical-wavelength 3D MPCs remain relatively unexplored due to the challenges posed by their fabrication. This work explores the use of multi-photon direct laser writing (DLW) coupled with electroless metallization as a means for preparing MPCs. Multi-photon DLW was used to prepare polymeric photonic crystal (PC) templates having a targeted micron-scale structure and form. MPCs were then created by metallizing the polymeric PCs via wet-chemical electroless deposition. The electromagnetic properties of the polymeric PCs and the metallized structures were characterized using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. It is shown that metallization transforms the optical properties of the structures from those of conventional 3D dielectric PCs to those consistent with 3D MPCs that exhibit ultra-wide photonic band gaps. These data demonstrate that multi-photon DLW followed by electroless deposition provides a viable and highly flexible route to MPCs, opening a new path to metal photonic materials and devices.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2007
- Identifier
- CFE0001787, ucf:47261
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0001787
- Title
- Optically isotropic liquid crystals for display and photonic applications.
- Creator
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Yan, Jin, Wu, Shintson, Zeldovich, Boris, Schoenfeld, Winston, Fang, Jiyu, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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For the past few decades, tremendous progress has been made on liquid crystal display (LCD) technologies in terms of stability, resolution, contrast ratio, and viewing angle. The remaining challenge is response time. The state-of-the-art response time of a nematic liquid crystal is a few milliseconds. Faster response time is desirable in order to reduce motion blur and to realize color sequential display using RGB LEDs, which triples the optical efficiency and resolution density. Polymer...
Show moreFor the past few decades, tremendous progress has been made on liquid crystal display (LCD) technologies in terms of stability, resolution, contrast ratio, and viewing angle. The remaining challenge is response time. The state-of-the-art response time of a nematic liquid crystal is a few milliseconds. Faster response time is desirable in order to reduce motion blur and to realize color sequential display using RGB LEDs, which triples the optical efficiency and resolution density. Polymer-stabilized blue phase liquid crystal (PS-BPLC) is a strong candidate for achieving fast response time because its self-assembled cubic structure greatly reduces the coherence length. The response time is typically in the submillisecond range and can even reach microsecond under optimized conditions. Moreover, it exhibit several attractive features, such as no need for surface alignment layer, intrinsic wide viewing angle, and cell gap insensitivity if an in-plane-switching (IPS) cell is employed. In this dissertation, recent progresses in polymer-stabilized blue phases, or more generally optically-isotropic liquid crystals, are presented. Potential applications in display and photonic devices are also demonstrated.In Chapter 1, a brief introduction of optically isotropic liquid crystals is given. In Chapter 2, we investigate each component of polymer-stabilized blue phase materials and provide guidelines for material preparation and optimization. In Chapter 3, the electro-optical properties of PS-BPLCs, including electric-field-induced birefringence and dynamic behaviors are characterized. Theoretical models are proposed to explain the physical phenomena. Good agreements between experimental data and models are obtained. The proposed models also provide useful guidelines for both material and device optimizations. Four display and photonic devices using PS-BPLCs are demonstrated in Chapter 4. First, by red-shifting the Bragg reflection and using circular polarizers, we reduce the LCD driving voltage by 35% as compared to a short-pitch BPLC while maintaining high contrast ratio and submillisecond response time. Second, a turning film which is critically needed for widening the viewing angle of a vertical field switching (VFS) BPLC mode is designed. With this film, the viewing angle of VFS is widened to (&)#177; 80(&)deg; in horizontal direction and (&)#177; 50(&)deg; in vertical direction. Without this turning film, the viewing angle is only (&)#177;30(&)deg;, which is too narrow for most applications. Third, a reflective BPLC display with vivid colors, submillisecond response time, and natural grayscales is demonstrated for the first time. The proposed BPLC reflective display opens a new gateway for 3D reflective displays; it could make significant impact to display industry. Finally, we demonstrate a tunable phase grating with a high diffraction efficiency of 40% and submillisecond response time. This tunable grating exhibits great potential for photonic and display applications, such as optical interconnects, beam steering, and projection displays.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2013
- Identifier
- CFE0005279, ucf:50551
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005279
- Title
- DESIGN AND OPTIMIZATION OF NANO-OPTICAL ELEMENTS BY COUPLING FABRICATION TO OPTICAL BEHAVIOR.
- Creator
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Rumpf, Raymond, Johnson, Eric, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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Photonic crystals and nanophotonics have received a great deal of attention over the last decade, largely due to improved numerical modeling and advances in fabrication technologies. To this day, fabrication and optical behavior remain decoupled during the design phase and numerous assumptions are made about "perfect" geometry. As research moves from theory to real devices, predicting device behavior based on realistic geometry becomes critical. In this dissertation, a set of numerical tools...
Show morePhotonic crystals and nanophotonics have received a great deal of attention over the last decade, largely due to improved numerical modeling and advances in fabrication technologies. To this day, fabrication and optical behavior remain decoupled during the design phase and numerous assumptions are made about "perfect" geometry. As research moves from theory to real devices, predicting device behavior based on realistic geometry becomes critical. In this dissertation, a set of numerical tools was developed to model micro and nano fabrication processes. They were combined with equally capable tools to model optical performance of the simulated structures. Using these tools, it was predicted and demonstrated that 3D nanostructures may be formed on a standard mask aligner. A space-variant photonic crystal filter was designed and optimized based on a simple fabrication method of etching holes through hetero-structured substrates. It was found that hole taper limited their optical performance and a method was developed to compensate. A method was developed to tune the spectral response of guided-mode resonance filters at the time of fabrication using models of etching and deposition. Autocloning was modeled and shown that it could be used to form extremely high aspect ratio structures to improve performance of form-birefringent devices. Finally, the numerical tools were applied to metallic photonic crystal devices.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2006
- Identifier
- CFE0001159, ucf:46849
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0001159
- Title
- Improved system for fabrication and characterization of nanophotonic devices by multi-photon lithography.
- Creator
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Sharma, Rashi, Kuebler, Stephen, Zou, Shengli, Huo, Qun, Beazley, Melanie, Phanstiel, Otto, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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A new system for multi-photon lithography (MPL) was developed and used to fabricate three-dimensional (3D) structures with higher aspect ratio, better resolution, improved fidelity, and reduced structural distortion relative to a conventional implementation of MPL.A set of curved waveguides (Rbend = 19 (&)#181;m, and 38 (&)#181;m) and straight waveguides (length = 50 (&)#181;m, Rbend = ?) were fabricated in an epoxide photopolymer and optically characterized using light having a wavelength in...
Show moreA new system for multi-photon lithography (MPL) was developed and used to fabricate three-dimensional (3D) structures with higher aspect ratio, better resolution, improved fidelity, and reduced structural distortion relative to a conventional implementation of MPL.A set of curved waveguides (Rbend = 19 (&)#181;m, and 38 (&)#181;m) and straight waveguides (length = 50 (&)#181;m, Rbend = ?) were fabricated in an epoxide photopolymer and optically characterized using light having a wavelength in vacuum of ?0 = 2.94 (&)#181;m. The optical performance of the waveguides was compared to novel spatially-variant photonic crystals (SVPCs) previously studied in the group. The waveguides were found to guide light with 90% lower efficiency, due to mode leakage. The study provides further evidence that SVPCs operate not through total internal reflection, but rather through self-collimation, as designed.3D uniform-lattice photonic crystals (ULPCs) were fabricated by MPL using a commercial acrylate photopolymer. The ULPCs were optically characterized at ?0 = 1.55 (&)#181;m. A laser beam with adjustable bandwidth was used to measure the self-collimation in the ULPCs. For the low bandwidth beam, vertically polarized light was self-collimated, whereas horizontally polarized light diverged. The transmission efficiency of the ULPCs was also measured as a function of fill factor. The ULPC having a fill factor of 48% exhibited 80% transmission.An etching process was also developed for non-destructively removing Au/Pd coatings that must be deposited onto structures to image them by scanning electron microscopy. The structural and optical integrity of the samples was found to be maintained despite etching. The sputter-coated sample sustained no structural damage when exposed to the ?0 = 1.55 (&)#181;m. However, the metal coating resulted in diminished transmission efficiency due to the high reflection of the 1.55 (&)#181;m beam by the metal coating.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2018
- Identifier
- CFE0007767, ucf:52380
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0007767
- Title
- Fabrication and Characterization of Spatially-Variant Self-Collimating Photonic Crystals.
- Creator
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Digaum, Jennefir, Kuebler, Stephen, Kik, Pieter, Schoenfeld, Winston, Likamwa, Patrick, Gesquiere, Andre, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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Spatially-variant photonic crystals (SVPCs) created using materials having a low refractive index are shown to be capable of abruptly controlling light beams with high polarization selectivity. SVPCs are photonic crystals for which the orientation of the unit cell is controllably varied throughout the lattice to control the flow of light. Multi-photon lithography in a photo polymer was used to fabricate three-dimensional SVPCs that direct the flow of light around a 90 degree bend. The optical...
Show moreSpatially-variant photonic crystals (SVPCs) created using materials having a low refractive index are shown to be capable of abruptly controlling light beams with high polarization selectivity. SVPCs are photonic crystals for which the orientation of the unit cell is controllably varied throughout the lattice to control the flow of light. Multi-photon lithography in a photo polymer was used to fabricate three-dimensional SVPCs that direct the flow of light around a 90 degree bend. The optical performance of the SVPCs was characterized using a scanning optical-fiber system that introduced light onto the input face of a structure and measured the intensity of light emanating from the output faces.As a proof-of-concept, SVPCs that can bend a beam at a wavelength of ?0 = 2.94 ?m were fabricated in the photo-polymer SU-8. The SVPCs were shown to direct infrared light of one polarization through a sharp bend, while the other polarization propagated straight through the SVPC, when the volumetric fill-factor is near 50%. The peak-to-peak ratio of intensities of the bent- and straight-through beams was 8:1, and a power efficiency of 8% was achieved. The low efficiency is attributed to optical absorption in SU-8 at ?0 = 2.94 ?m.SVPCs that can bend a beam at telecommunications wavelengths near ?0 = 1.55 ?m were fabricated by multi-photon lithography in the photo-polymer IP-Dip. IP-Dip was chosen over SU 8 to enable fabrication of finer features, as are needed for an SVPC scaled in size to operate at shorter wavelengths. Experimental characterization shows that these particular SVPCs provide effective control of the vertically polarized beam at ?0 = 1.55 ?m, when the volumetric fill-factor is around 46%. The beam bending peak efficiency was found to be 52.5% with a peak-to-peak ratio between the bent- and straight-through beams of 78.7. Additionally, these SVPCs can bend a light beam with a broad bandwidth of 153 nm that encompasses both the C- and S-bands of the telecommunications window. Furthermore, the SVPCs have high tolerance to misalignment, in which an offset of the input beam by as much as 6 ?m causes the beam-bending efficiency to drop no more than 50%. Finally, it is shown that these particular SVPCs can bend beams without significantly distorting the mode profile. This work introduces a new scheme for controlling light that should be useful for integrated photonics.The penultimate chapter discusses nonlinear phenomena that were observed during the optical characterization of the SVPCs using a high peak-power amplified femtosecond laser system. The first of these effects is referred to as "super-collimation", in which the beam bending peak efficiency of certain SVPCs increases with input intensity, reaching as high as 68%. The second effect pertains to nonlinear imaging of light at ?0 = 1.55 ?m scattered from an SVPC and detected using a silicon-CCD camera. This effect enables beam bending within the device to be imaged in real time. The dissertation concludes with an outlook for SVPCs, discussing potential applications and challenges that must be addressed to advance their use in photonics.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2016
- Identifier
- CFE0006527, ucf:51371
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0006527
- Title
- MODELING AND DESIGN OF A PHOTONIC CRYSTAL CHIP HOSTING A QUANTUM NETWORK MADE OF SINGLE SPINS IN QUANTUM DOTS THAT INTERACT VIA SINGLE PHOTONS.
- Creator
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Seigneur, Hubert, Schoenfeld, Winston, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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In this dissertation, the prospect of a quantum technology based on a photonic crystal chip hosting a quantum network made of quantum dot spins interacting via single photons is investigated. The mathematical procedure to deal with the Liouville-Von Neumann equation, which describes the time-evolution of the density matrix, was derived for an arbitrary system, giving general equations. Using this theoretical groundwork, a numerical model was then developed to study the spatiotemporal dynamics...
Show moreIn this dissertation, the prospect of a quantum technology based on a photonic crystal chip hosting a quantum network made of quantum dot spins interacting via single photons is investigated. The mathematical procedure to deal with the Liouville-Von Neumann equation, which describes the time-evolution of the density matrix, was derived for an arbitrary system, giving general equations. Using this theoretical groundwork, a numerical model was then developed to study the spatiotemporal dynamics of entanglement between various qubits produced in a controlled way over the entire quantum network. As a result, an efficient quantum interface was engineered allowing for storage qubits and traveling qubits to exchange information coherently while demonstrating little error and loss in the process; such interface is indispensable for the realization of a functional quantum network. Furthermore, a carefully orchestrated dynamic control over the propagation of the flying qubit showed high-efficiency capability for on-chip single-photon transfer. Using the optimized dispersion properties obtained quantum mechanically as design parameters, a possible physical structure for the photonic crystal chip was constructed using the Plane Wave Expansion and Finite-Difference Time-Domain numerical techniques, exhibiting almost identical transfer efficiencies in terms of normalized energy densities of the classical electromagnetic field. These promising results bring us one step closer to the physical realization of an integrated quantum technology combining both semiconductor quantum dots and sub-wavelength photonic structures.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2010
- Identifier
- CFE0003433, ucf:48391
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0003433
- Title
- Peak Power Scaling of Nanosecond Pulses in Thulium based Fiber Lasers.
- Creator
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Gaida, Christian, Richardson, Martin, Shah, Lawrence, Amezcua Correa, Rodrigo, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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Thulium based fiber lasers represent a promising alternative for pulse energy scaling and highpeak power generation with ytterbium based systems at 1 micrometer. Advantages of thulium arise fromthe operation at longer wavelengths and a large gain bandwidth (1.8-2.1 micrometer). Nonlinear effects,such as self phase modulation, stimulated Raman scattering and stimulated Brillouin scattering generally limit peak power scaling in fiber lasers. The longer wavelength of thulium fiber lasersand...
Show moreThulium based fiber lasers represent a promising alternative for pulse energy scaling and highpeak power generation with ytterbium based systems at 1 micrometer. Advantages of thulium arise fromthe operation at longer wavelengths and a large gain bandwidth (1.8-2.1 micrometer). Nonlinear effects,such as self phase modulation, stimulated Raman scattering and stimulated Brillouin scattering generally limit peak power scaling in fiber lasers. The longer wavelength of thulium fiber lasersand large mode field areas can significantly increase the nonlinear thresholds. Compared to 1 micrometer systems, thulium fiber lasers enable single mode guidance for two times larger mode field diameterin step index fibers. Similar behavior is expected for index guiding thulium doped photonic crystalfibers.In this work a novel thulium doped rod type photonic crystal fiber design with large mode field diameter (>50 micrometer) was first characterized in CW-lasing configuration and then utilized as finalamplifier in a two stage master oscillator power amplifier. The system generated MW-level peakpower at 6.5ns pulse duration and 1kHz repetition rate. This world record performance exemplifiesthe potential of thulium fiber lasers to supersede ytterbium based systems for very high peak powergeneration in the future.As part of this work a computer model for the transient simulation of pulsed amplification inthulium based fiber lasers was developed. The simulations are in good agreement with the experimentalresults. The computer model can be used for efficient optimization of future thulium basedfiber amplifier designs.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2013
- Identifier
- CFE0004845, ucf:49699
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004845
- Title
- REFRACTIVE INDICES OF LIQUID CRYSTALS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS IN DISPLAY AND PHOTONIC DEVICES.
- Creator
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Li, Jun, Wu, Shin-Tson, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
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Liquid crystals (LCs) are important materials for flat panel display and photonic devices. Most LC devices use electrical field-, magnetic field-, or temperature-induced refractive index change to modulate the incident light. Molecular constituents, wavelength, and temperature are the three primary factors determining the liquid crystal refractive indices: ne and no for the extraordinary and ordinary rays, respectively. In this dissertation, we derive several physical models for describing...
Show moreLiquid crystals (LCs) are important materials for flat panel display and photonic devices. Most LC devices use electrical field-, magnetic field-, or temperature-induced refractive index change to modulate the incident light. Molecular constituents, wavelength, and temperature are the three primary factors determining the liquid crystal refractive indices: ne and no for the extraordinary and ordinary rays, respectively. In this dissertation, we derive several physical models for describing the wavelength and temperature effects on liquid crystal refractive indices, average refractive index, and birefringence. Based on these models, we develop some high temperature gradient refractive index LC mixtures for photonic applications, such as thermal tunable liquid crystal photonic crystal fibers and thermal solitons. Liquid crystal refractive indices decrease as the wavelength increase. Both ne and no saturate in the infrared region. Wavelength effect on LC refractive indices is important for the design of direct-view displays. In Chapter 2, we derive the extended Cauchy models for describing the wavelength effect on liquid crystal refractive indices in the visible and infrared spectral regions based on the three-band model. The three-coefficient Cauchy model could be used for describing the refractive indices of liquid crystals with low, medium, and high birefringence, whereas the two-coefficient Cauchy model is more suitable for low birefringence liquid crystals. The critical value of the birefringence is deltan~0.12. Temperature is another important factor affecting the LC refractive indices. The thermal effect originated from the lamp of projection display would affect the performance of the employed liquid crystal. In Chapter 3, we derive the four-parameter and three-parameter parabolic models for describing the temperature effect on the LC refractive indices based on Vuks model and Haller equation. We validate the empirical Haller equation quantitatively. We also validate that the average refractive index of liquid crystal decreases linearly as the temperature increases. Liquid crystals exhibit a large thermal nonlinearity which is attractive for new photonic applications using photonic crystal fibers. We derive the physical models for describing the temperature gradient of the LC refractive indices, ne and no, based on the four-parameter model. We find that LC exhibits a crossover temperature To at which dno/dT is equal to zero. The physical models of the temperature gradient indicate that ne, the extraordinary refractive index, always decreases as the temperature increases since dne/dT is always negative, whereas no, the ordinary refractive index, decreases as the temperature increases when the temperature is lower than the crossover temperature (dno/dT<0 when the temperature is lower than To) and increases as the temperature increases when the temperature is higher than the crossover temperature (dno/dT>0 when the temperature is higher than To ). Measurements of LC refractive indices play an important role for validating the physical models and the device design. Liquid crystal is anisotropic and the incident linearly polarized light encounters two different refractive indices when the polarization is parallel or perpendicular to the optic axis. The measurement is more complicated than that for an isotropic medium. In Chapter 4, we use a multi-wavelength Abbe refractometer to measure the LC refractive indices in the visible light region. We measured the LC refractive indices at six wavelengths, lamda=450, 486, 546, 589, 633 and 656 nm by changing the filters. We use a circulating constant temperature bath to control the temperature of the sample. The temperature range is from 10 to 55 oC. The refractive index data measured include five low-birefringence liquid crystals, MLC-9200-000, MLC-9200-100, MLC-6608 (delta_epsilon=-4.2), MLC-6241-000, and UCF-280 (delta_epsilon=-4); four middle-birefringence liquid crystals, 5CB, 5PCH, E7, E48 and BL003; four high-birefringence liquid crystals, BL006, BL038, E44 and UCF-35, and two liquid crystals with high dno/dT at room temperature, UCF-1 and UCF-2. The refractive indices of E7 at two infrared wavelengths lamda=1.55 and 10.6 um are measured by the wedged-cell refractometer method. The UV absorption spectra of several liquid crystals, MLC-9200-000, MLC-9200-100, MLC-6608 and TL-216 are measured, too. In section 6.5, we also measure the refractive index of cured optical films of NOA65 and NOA81 using the multi-wavelength Abbe refractometer. In Chapter 5, we use the experimental data measured in Chapter 4 to validate the physical models we derived, the extended three-coefficient and two-coefficient Cauchy models, the four-parameter and three-parameter parabolic models. For the first time, we validate the Vuks model using the experimental data of liquid crystals directly. We also validate the empirical Haller equation for the LC birefringence delta_n and the linear equation for the LC average refractive index. The study of the LC refractive indices explores several new photonic applications for liquid crystals such as high temperature gradient liquid crystals, high thermal tunable liquid crystal photonic crystal fibers, the laser induced 2D+1 thermal solitons in nematic crystals, determination for the infrared refractive indices of liquid crystals, comparative study for refractive index between liquid crystals and photopolymers for polymer dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) applications, and so on. In Chapter 6, we introduce these applications one by one. First, we formulate two novel liquid crystals, UCF-1 and UCF-2, with high dno/dT at room temperature. The dno/dT of UCF-1 is about 4X higher than that of 5CB at room temperature. Second, we infiltrate UCF-1 into the micro holes around the silica core of a section of three-rod core PCF and set up a highly thermal tunable liquid crystal photonic crystal fiber. The guided mode has an effective area of 440 Ým2 with an insertion loss of less than 0.5dB. The loss is mainly attributed to coupling losses between the index-guided section and the bandgap-guided section. The thermal tuning sensitivity of the spectral position of the bandgap was measured to be 27 nm/degree around room temperature, which is 4.6 times higher than that using the commercial E7 LC mixture operated at a temperature above 50 degree C. Third, the novel liquid crystals UCF-1 and UCF-2 are preferred to trigger the laser-induced thermal solitons in nematic liquid crystal confined in a capillary because of the high positive temperature gradient at room temperature. Fourth, we extrapolate the refractive index data measured at the visible light region to the near and far infrared region basing on the extended Cauchy model and four-parameter model. The extrapolation method is validated by the experimental data measured at the visible light and infrared light regions. Knowing the LC refractive indices at the infrared region is important for some photonic devices operated in this light region. Finally, we make a completely comparative study for refractive index between two photocurable polymers (NOA65 and NOA81) and two series of Merck liquid crystals, E-series (E44, E48, and E7) and BL-series (BL038, BL003 and BL006) in order to optimize the performance of polymer dispersed liquid crystals (PDLC). Among the LC materials we studied, BL038 and E48 are good candidates for making PDLC system incorporating NOA65. The BL038 PDLC cell shows a higher contrast ratio than the E48 cell because BL038 has a better matched ordinary refractive index, higher birefringence, and similar miscibility as compared to E48. Liquid crystals having a good miscibility with polymer, matched ordinary refractive index, and higher birefringence help to improve the PDLC contrast ratio for display applications. In Chapter 7, we give a general summary for the dissertation.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2005
- Identifier
- CFE0000808, ucf:46677
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0000808
- Title
- Specialty Fiber Lasers and Novel Fiber Devices.
- Creator
-
Jollivet, Clemence, Schulzgen, Axel, Moharam, Jim, Richardson, Martin, Mafi, Arash, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
-
At the Dawn of the 21st century, the field of specialty optical fibers experienced a scientific revolution with the introduction of the stack-and-draw technique, a multi-steps and advanced fiber fabrication method, which enabled the creation of well-controlled micro-structured designs. Since then, an extremely wide variety of finely tuned fiber structures have been demonstrated including novel materials and novel designs. As the complexity of the fiber design increased, highly-controlled...
Show moreAt the Dawn of the 21st century, the field of specialty optical fibers experienced a scientific revolution with the introduction of the stack-and-draw technique, a multi-steps and advanced fiber fabrication method, which enabled the creation of well-controlled micro-structured designs. Since then, an extremely wide variety of finely tuned fiber structures have been demonstrated including novel materials and novel designs. As the complexity of the fiber design increased, highly-controlled fabrication processes became critical. To determine the ability of a novel fiber design to deliver light with properties tailored according to a specific application, several mode analysis techniques were reported, addressing the recurring needs for in-depth fiber characterization. The first part of this dissertation details a novel experiment that was demonstrated to achieve modal decomposition with extended capabilities, reaching beyond the limits set by the existing mode analysis techniques. As a result, individual transverse modes carrying between ~0.01% and ~30% of the total light were resolved with unmatched accuracy. Furthermore, this approach was employed to decompose the light guided in Large-Mode Area (LMA) fiber, Photonic Crystal Fiber (PCF) and Leakage Channel Fiber (LCF). The single-mode performances were evaluated and compared. As a result, the suitability of each specialty fiber design to be implemented for power-scaling applications of fiber laser systems was experimentally determined.The second part of this dissertation is dedicated to novel specialty fiber laser systems. First, challenges related to the monolithic integration of novel and complex specialty fiber designs in all-fiber systems were addressed. The poor design and size compatibility between specialty fibers and conventional fiber-based components limits their monolithic integration due to high coupling loss and unstable performances. Here, novel all-fiber Mode-Field Adapter (MFA) devices made of selected segments of Graded Index Multimode Fiber (GIMF) were implemented to mitigate the coupling losses between a LMA PCF and a conventional Single-Mode Fiber (SMF), presenting an initial 18-fold mode-field area mismatch. It was experimentally demonstrated that the overall transmission in the mode-matched fiber chain was increased by more than 11 dB (the MFA was a 250 ?m piece of 50 ?m core diameter GIMF). This approach was further employed to assemble monolithic fiber laser cavities combining an active LMA PCF and fiber Bragg gratings (FBG) in conventional SMF. It was demonstrated that intra-cavity mode-matching results in an efficient (60%) and narrow-linewidth (200 pm) laser emission at the FBG wavelength.In the last section of this dissertation, monolithic Multi-Core Fiber (MCF) laser cavities were reported for the first time. Compared to existing MCF lasers, renown for high-brightness beam delivery after selection of the in-phase supermode, the present new generation of 7-coupled-cores Yb-doped fiber laser uses the gain from several supermodes simultaneously. In order to uncover mode competition mechanisms during amplification and the complex dynamics of multi-supermode lasing, novel diagnostic approaches were demonstrated. After characterizing the laser behavior, the first observations of self-mode-locking in linear MCF laser cavities were discovered.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2014
- Identifier
- CFE0005354, ucf:50491
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005354
- Title
- Broad Bandwidth, All-fiber, Thulium-doped Photonic Crystal Fiber Amplifier for Potential Use in Scaling Ultrashort Pulse Peak Powers.
- Creator
-
Sincore, Alex, Richardson, Martin, Shah, Lawrence, Amezcua Correa, Rodrigo, University of Central Florida
- Abstract / Description
-
Fiber based ultrashort pulse laser sources are desirable for many applications; however generating high peak powers in fiber lasers is primarily limited by the onset of nonlinear effects such as self-phase modulation, stimulated Raman scattering, and self-focusing. Increasing the fiber core diameter mitigates the onset of these nonlinear effects, but also allows unwanted higher-order transverse spatial modes to propagate. Both large core diameters and single-mode propagation can be...
Show moreFiber based ultrashort pulse laser sources are desirable for many applications; however generating high peak powers in fiber lasers is primarily limited by the onset of nonlinear effects such as self-phase modulation, stimulated Raman scattering, and self-focusing. Increasing the fiber core diameter mitigates the onset of these nonlinear effects, but also allows unwanted higher-order transverse spatial modes to propagate. Both large core diameters and single-mode propagation can be simultaneously attained using photonic crystal fibers.Thulium-doped fiber lasers are attractive for high peak power ultrashort pulse systems. They offer a broad gain bandwidth, capable of amplifying sub-100 femtosecond pulses. The longer center wavelength at 2 ?m theoretically enables higher peak powers relative to 1 ?m systems since nonlinear effects inversely scale with wavelength. Also, the 2 ?m emission is desirable to support applications reaching further into the mid-IR.This work evaluates the performance of a novel all-fiber pump combiner that incorporates a thulium-doped photonic crystal fiber. This fully integrated amplifier is characterized and possesses a large gain bandwidth, essentially single-mode propagation, and high degree of polarization. This innovative all-fiber, thulium-doped photonic crystal fiber amplifier has great potential for enabling high peak powers in 2 ?m fiber systems; however the current optical-to-optical efficiency is low relative to similar free-space amplifiers. Further development and device optimization will lead to higher efficiencies and improved performance.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2014
- Identifier
- CFE0005260, ucf:50611
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005260