RESUMO
Photosensitive materials are widely used for the direct fabrication of surface relief gratings (SRGs) without the selective etching of the material. It is known that the interferometric approach makes it possible to fabricate SRGs with submicron and even subwavelength periods. However, to change the period of the written SRGs, it is necessary to change the convergence angle, shift a sample, and readjust the interferometric setup. Recently, it was shown that structured laser beams with predetermined, periodically modulated polarization distributions can also be used to fabricate SRGs. A structured laser beam with the desired polarization distribution can be formed with just one polarizing optical element-for example, the so-called depolarizer, a patterned micro-retarder array. The use of such stacked elements makes it possible to directly control the modulation period of the polarization of the generated laser beam. We show that this approach allows one to fabricate SRGs with submicron periods. Moreover, the addition of q-plates, elements effectively used to generate cylindrical vector beams with polarization singularities, allows the efficient formation of fork polarization gratings (FPGs) and the fabrication of higher-order fork-shaped SRGs. Full control of the parameters of the generated FPGs is possible. We demonstrate the formation of FPGs of higher orders (up to 12) by only adding first- and second-order q-plates and half-wave plates to the depolarizers. In this work, we numerically and experimentally study the parameters of various types of SRGs formed using these stacked polarizing elements and show the significant potential of this method for the laser processing of photosensitive materials, which often also serve as polarization sensors.
RESUMO
It is known that the astigmatic transformation can be used to analyze the topological charge of a vortex beam, which can be implemented by using various optical methods. In this case, in order to form an astigmatic beam pattern suitable for the clear detection of a topological charge, an optical adjustment is often required (changing the lens tilt and/or the detection distance). In this article, we propose to use multi-channel diffractive optical elements (DOEs) for the simultaneous implementation of the astigmatic transformations of various types and levels. Such multi-channel DOEs make it possible to insert several types of astigmatic aberrations of different levels into the analyzed vortex beam simultaneously, and to form a set of aberration-transformed beam patterns in different diffraction orders in one detection plane. The proposed approach greatly simplifies the analysis of the characteristics of a vortex beam based on measurements in the single plane without additional adjustments. In this article, a detailed study of the effect of various types of astigmatic aberrations based on a numerical simulation and experiments was carried out, which confirmed the effectiveness of the proposed approach.
RESUMO
A high-efficiency dual-purpose plasmonic perfect absorber sensor based on LiNbO3 and graphene layers was investigated in this paper for the refractive index and thermal sensing. The sensor design was kept simple for easy fabrication, comprising a LiNbO3 substrate with a quartz layer, thin layer of graphene, four gold nanorods, and a nanocavity in each unit cell. The nanocavity is located in the middle of the cell to facilitate the penetration of EM energy to the subsurface layers. The proposed sensor design achieved an output response of 99.9% reflection, which was easy to detect without having any specialized conditions for operability. The performance of the device was numerically investigated for the biomedical refractive index range of 1.33 to 1.40, yielding a sensitivity value of 981 nm/RIU with a figure-of-merit of 61.31 RIU-1. By including an additional polydimethylsiloxane polymer functional layer on the top, the device was also tested as a thermal sensor, which yielded a sensitivity level of -0.23 nm/°C.
Assuntos
Grafite , Refratometria , Quartzo , Temperatura , Ouro , DimetilpolisiloxanosRESUMO
In this paper, we present a hybrid refractive-diffractive lens that, when paired with a deep neural network-based image reconstruction, produces high-quality, real-world images with minimal artifacts, reaching a PSNR of 28 dB on the test set. Our diffractive element compensates for the off-axis aberrations of a single refractive element and has reduced chromatic aberrations across the visible light spectrum. We also describe our training set augmentation and novel quality criteria called "false edge level" (FEL), which validates that the neural network produces visually appealing images without artifacts under a wide range of ISO and exposure settings. Our quality criteria (FEL) enabled us to include real scene images without a corresponding ground truth in the training process.
Assuntos
Lentes , Óptica e Fotônica , Refração Ocular , Luz , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por ComputadorRESUMO
We propose a method for designing a refractive optical element with two working surfaces transforming an incident beam with a plane wavefront into an output beam with prescribed irradiance distribution and a non-planar wavefront. The presented method generalizes the supporting quadric method [Opt. Express28, 22642 (2020)10.1364/OE.398990] proposed for collimated beam shaping to the case of a non-planar output wavefront. The method is simple to implement and is based on just a few main equations. We present several examples of designing optical elements (including elements with piecewise-smooth optical surfaces) generating light beams with prescribed irradiance distributions and wavefronts (spherical and aspherical). The examples demonstrate high performance of the method.
RESUMO
Hybrid methods combining the geometrical-optics and diffraction-theory methods enable designing diffractive optical elements (DOEs) with high performance due to the suppression of stray light and speckles and, at the same time, with a regular and fabrication-friendly microrelief. Here, we propose a geometrical-optics method for calculating the eikonal function of the light field providing the generation of a required irradiance distribution. In the method, the problem of calculating the eikonal function is formulated in a semi-discrete form as a problem of maximizing a concave function. For solving the maximization problem, a gradient method is used, with analytical expressions obtained for the gradient. In contrast to geometrical-optics approaches based on solving the Monge-Ampére equation using finite difference methods, the proposed method enables generating irradiance distributions defined on disconnected regions with non-smooth boundaries. As an example, we calculate an eikonal function, which provides the generation of a "discontinuous" irradiance distribution in the form of a hexagram. It is shown that the utilization of the hybrid approach, in which the obtained geometrical-optics solution is used as a starting point in iterative Fourier transform algorithms, enables designing DOEs with a quasi-regular or piecewise-smooth microrelief structure. The calculation results are confirmed by the results of experimental investigations of a DOE generating a hexagram-shaped irradiance distribution.
RESUMO
Axicon is a versatile optical element for forming a zero-order Bessel beam, including high-power laser radiation schemes. Nevertheless, it has drawbacks such as the produced beam's parameters being dependent on a particular element, the output beam's intensity distribution being dependent on the quality of element manufacturing, and uneven axial intensity distribution. To address these issues, extensive research has been undertaken to develop nondiffracting beams using a variety of advanced techniques. We looked at four different and special approaches for creating nondiffracting beams in this article. Diffractive axicons, meta-axicons-flat optics, spatial light modulators, and photonic integrated circuit-based axicons are among these approaches. Lately, there has been noteworthy curiosity in reducing the thickness and weight of axicons by exploiting diffraction. Meta-axicons, which are ultrathin flat optical elements made up of metasurfaces built up of arrays of subwavelength optical antennas, are one way to address such needs. In addition, when compared to their traditional refractive and diffractive equivalents, meta-axicons have a number of distinguishing advantages, including aberration correction, active tunability, and semi-transparency. This paper is not intended to be a critique of any method. We have outlined the most recent advancements in this field and let readers determine which approach best meets their needs based on the ease of fabrication and utilization. Moreover, one section is devoted to applications of axicons utilized as sensors of optical properties of devices and elements as well as singular beams states and wavefront features.
RESUMO
Herein, we have discussed three major methods which have been generally employed for the generation of optical beams with orbital angular momentum (OAM). These methods include the practice of diffractive optics elements (DOEs), metasurfaces (MSs), and photonic integrated circuits (PICs) for the production of in-plane and out-of-plane OAM. This topic has been significantly evolved as a result; these three methods have been further implemented efficiently by different novel approaches which are discussed as well. Furthermore, development in the OAM detection techniques has also been presented. We have tried our best to bring novel and up-to-date information to the readers on this interesting and widely investigated topic.
RESUMO
We propose a method for designing diffractive lenses having a fixed-position focus at several prescribed wavelengths, which we refer to as spectral diffractive lenses (SDLs). The method is based on minimizing an objective function describing the deviation of the complex transmission functions of the spectral lens at the operating wavelengths from the complex transmission functions of diffractive lenses calculated separately for each of these wavelengths. As examples, SDLs operating at three, five, and seven different wavelengths are designed. The simulation results of the calculated lenses confirm high efficiency of the proposed method. For experimental verification of the design method, we fabricate using direct laser writing and experimentally investigate an SDL operating at five wavelengths. The presented experimental results confirm the efficiency of the proposed method in practical problems of designing SDLs. The obtained results may find applications in the design and fabrication of novel flat diffractive lenses with reduced chromatic effects.
RESUMO
In this work, the propagation of vortex beams is treated using a catastrophe theory approach. Analytic expressions are deduced to describe caustic surfaces produced by vortex lenses and vortex axicons. The obtained analytics allow us to explain the formation of the shadow region along the optical axis for vortex beams using geometric optics (previously, the zero axial intensity was explained just by diffraction effects). Thus, the presence of a vortex eikonal leads to a fundamental change in the type of axial caustic. Another important distinction of the caustics produced by vortex beams from those produced by nonvortex radial beams has been shown to consist in wavelength-dependence. The results of numerical simulation show that the propagation operator defined using a geometrical optics approximation agrees well with the numerical simulation results obtained using a nonparaxial diffraction operator based on the conical wave expansion.
RESUMO
We consider a method for designing freeform mirrors generating prescribed irradiance distributions in the far field. The method is based on the formulation of the problem of calculating a ray mapping as a Monge-Kantorovich mass transportation problem and on the reduction of the latter problem to a linear assignment problem. As examples, we design freeform mirrors generating a uniform irradiance distribution in a rectangular region and a complex chessboard-shaped distribution. The mirror generating a rectangular irradiance distribution is fabricated and experimentally investigated. The experimental results are in good agreement with the numerical simulations and confirm the manufacturability of the mirrors designed using the considered method.
RESUMO
The regularities and features of the formation of arrays of zinc oxide nano-objects with varying morphology are determined by CO2 laser processing with intensification of diffusion processes in the solid state of Cu-Zn metallic materials which are selectively oxidizable. In the process of laser treatment in air using the synergy of heat exposure and vibrations induced by laser with a force fundamental frequency of 100 Hz, the brass surface of samples is oxidized mainly with the generation of ZnO nanowires. The condition for intensification is the local non-stationary deformation caused by sound waves induced by laser. Upon the initiation of the processes of exfoliation of the initially formed layers on the material surface, apart from a disordered structure, a structure was formed in the central region containing two-dimensional objects made of zinc oxide with characteristic thicknesses of 70-100 nm. Such arrays can provide the potential to create a periodic localized electric field applying direct current, this allows the production of electrically switched diffraction gratings with a variable nature of zones. It has been established that during laser pulse-periodic irradiation on brass, the component of the metal alloy, namely, zinc, will oxidize on the surface in the extent that its diffusion to the surface will be ensured. During laser pulse-periodic heating under conditions of the experiment, the diffusion coefficient was 2-3 times higher than from direct heating and exposure to a temperature of 700 °C. The study of the electrical resistance of the created samples by the contact probe method was performed by the four-point probe method. It was determined that the specific electrical resistance at the center of the sample was 30-40% more than at the periphery. To determine the possibility of using the obtained material based on zinc oxide for the creation of sensors, oxygen was adsorbed on the sample in an oxygen-argon mixture, and then the electrical resistance in the central part was measured. It was found that the adsorbed oxygen increases the electrical resistivity of the sample by 70%. The formation of an oxide layer directly from the metal substrate can solve problem of forming an electrical contact between the gas-sensitive oxide layer and this substrate.
RESUMO
We consider the problem of calculating the eikonal function defined on a certain curved surface from the condition of generating a prescribed irradiance distribution on a target surface. We show that the calculation of the "ray mapping" corresponding to the eikonal function is reduced to the solution of a linear assignment problem (LAP). We propose an iterative algorithm for calculating a refractive optical surface from the condition of generating a prescribed near-field irradiance distribution in a non-paraxial case. The algorithm is based on sequential calculation of eikonal functions defined on curved surfaces using the LAP-based approach. The proposed algorithm is applied to the calculation of refractive optical elements generating uniform irradiance distributions in a rectangular region and in a region in the form of the letters "IPSI" in the case of a circular incident beam. The presented ray-tracing simulations of the designed optical elements demonstrate high efficiency of the proposed iterative algorithm.
RESUMO
The design of an axisymmetrical refractive optical element transforming a given incident beam into an output beam with prescribed illuminance distribution and wavefront is considered. The wavefront of the output beam is represented by the eikonal function defined in a certain plane behind the optical element. The design of the optical element is reduced to the solution of two explicit ordinary differential equations of the first order. These equations can be easily integrated using conventional numerical methods. As examples, we consider the design of two optical elements transforming a spherical beam from a point Lambertian light source into the uniform-illuminance beams with a plane wavefront and with a complex wavefront providing the subsequent focusing into a line segment on the optical axis.
RESUMO
A new source-target mapping for the design of mirrors generating prescribed 2D intensity distributions is proposed. The surface of the mirror implementing the obtained mapping is expressed in an analytical form. Presented simulation results demonstrate high performance of the proposed method. In the case of generation of rectangular and elliptical intensity distributions with angular dimensions from 80° x 20° to 40° x 20°, relative standard error does not exceed 8.5%. The method can be extended to the calculation of refractive optical elements.
RESUMO
We suggest vortex phase elements to detect the polarization state of the focused incident beam. We analytically and numerically show that only the types of polarization (linear, circular, or cylindrical) can be distinguished in the low numerical aperture (NA) mode. Sharp focusing is necessary to identify the polarization state in more detail (direction or sign). We consider a high NA micro-objective and a diffractive axicon as focusing systems. We show that the diffractive axicon more precisely detects the polarization state than does the micro-objective with the same NA.
RESUMO
In this paper, we propose and numerically investigate an all-optical temporal integrator based on a photonic crystal cavity. We show that an array of photonic crystal cavities enables high-order temporal integration. The effect of the value of the cavity's free spectral range on the accuracy of the integration is considered. The influence of the coupling coefficients in the resonator array on the integration accuracy is demonstrated. A compact integrator based on a photonic crystal nanobeam cavity is designed, which allows high-precision integration of optical pulses of subpicosecond duration.
RESUMO
We show theoretically and numerically that a planar structure consisting of two isotropic dielectric layers can be used to minimize parasitic scattering of surface plasmon polaritons for arbitrary incidence angle. The average scattering losses are reduced by an order-of-magnitude down to 1-3%. The surface plasmon refraction with the scattering suppression can be accurately described by an analytical model based on the Fresnel equations. The proposed approach can be used for the design of plasmonic lenses, reflectors, plasmonic crystals and plasmonic laser cavities.
RESUMO
We calculate a refractive surface to generate a one-parameter intensity distribution described by a vector function of one argument from an incident beam with a plane wavefront. The calculation of the refractive surface is reduced to the solution of two explicit ordinary differential equations of the first order. An approach to solving the problem of the existence of solutions for various one-parameter intensity distributions is proposed. Optical elements that form a variety of intensity distributions (a line, a circular arc, and a double-arc) are designed. The results of numerical simulations of the designed optical elements demonstrate the high quality of the generated line-shaped patterns.
RESUMO
Photonic neural networks (PNNs), utilizing light-based technologies, show immense potential in artificial intelligence (AI) and computing. Compared to traditional electronic neural networks, they offer faster processing speeds, lower energy usage, and improved parallelism. Leveraging light's properties for information processing could revolutionize diverse applications, including complex calculations and advanced machine learning (ML). Furthermore, these networks could address scalability and efficiency challenges in large-scale AI systems, potentially reshaping the future of computing and AI research. In this comprehensive review, we provide current, cutting-edge insights into diverse types of PNNs crafted for both imaging and computing purposes. Additionally, we delve into the intricate challenges they encounter during implementation, while also illuminating the promising perspectives they introduce to the field.