The Simulation, Design, and Fabrication of Optical Filters

The Simulation, Design, and Fabrication of Optical Filters
Author: John-Michael Juneau
Publisher:
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2017
Genre: Light filters
ISBN:

The purpose of this thesis is to create a model for designing optical filters and a method for fabricating the designed filters onto a multitude of substrates, as well as to find ways to optimize this process. The substrates that were tested were quartz, glass slides, polycarbonate, and polyethylene terephthalate (PET). This work will account for variations in the deposition process and substrate cleaning method, in order to optimize the performance of the final optical filter. Several different filters were simulated and then fabricated. These filters included 3, 5, and 7-layer Bragg reflectors, 11-layer narrowband filters, and some variations of the 11-layer narrowband filter where the center layer is adjusted. This paper will highlight the steps involved in designing and simulating these filters, the steps involved in testing and optimizing their fabrication processes, and the tests and measurements determining their effectiveness. The effectiveness of the filters is determined by how high their maximum reflectivity and transmittance are, and in the case of narrowband filters by the width of the transmittance peak’s full width half max (FWHM).

Omnidirectional Optical Filters

Omnidirectional Optical Filters
Author: Vladimir Kochergin
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2013-03-14
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1475737939

Optical Filters play an important role in the areas of imaging, sensing, MEMS and photonics. Omnidirectional Optical Filters gives an integrated presentation of this new type of filter design that is rapidly becoming an integral part of these areas. Not only does the book give the reader a fresh look at the development of optical filter material; it is the first text dedicated to the explanation of omnidirectional optical filters. Beginning with the description of the basic optical phenomena behind these filters, the book moves on to classical filter design, and then newer designs. For the first time, omnidirectional short-pass, band pass, band-blocking and narrow band-pass filter designs are explained in detail. For graduate and undergraduate students interested in optics, photonics and MEMS, this book will give a thorough understanding of the design, fabrication and theory behind omnidirectional optical filters. Engineers in imaging, sensing and MEMS looking to learn more about these filters will also find it a valuable reference and tool.

Design and fabrication of optical filters for laser frequency

Design and fabrication of optical filters for laser frequency
Author: Samuel J. Holmes
Publisher:
Total Pages: 64
Release: 1964
Genre:
ISBN:

Theoretical aspects, production methods, and evaluation techniques of narrow band optical filters, which employ a thin sheet of mica in place of the usual evaporated dielectric spacer layer, are described. Such filters have been made and are reported with half-widths of less than 2 A and with transmission on the order of 60%. In particular, details are given of the method of cleaving the mica sheets and the measurement of absorption. A filter holder is described which makes it possible to construct filters of practical size. Theoretical and experimental values are given for the angular sensitivity. Other properties discussed are the tunability, background, the spectral region for which they can be constructed, and the stability of the filters with time and with temperature changes. Recommendations for future work with such narrow band optical filters are presented and continuation of the program is recommended. (Author).

Design and Optimization of Nanostructured Optical Filters

Design and Optimization of Nanostructured Optical Filters
Author: Jeremiah Daniel Brown
Publisher:
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2009
Genre: Bragg gratings
ISBN:

Optical filters encompass a vast array of devices and structures for a wide variety of applications. Generally speaking, an optical filter is some structure that applies a designed amplitude and phase transform to an incident signal. Different classes of filters have vastly divergent characteristics, and one of the challenges in the optical design process is identifying the ideal filter for a given application and optimizing it to obtain a specific response. In particular, it is highly advantageous to obtain a filter that can be seamlessly integrated into an overall device package without requiring exotic fabrication steps, extremely sensitive alignments, or complicated conversions between optical and electrical signals. This dissertation explores three classes of nano-scale optical filters in an effort to obtain different types of dispersive response functions. First, dispersive waveguides are designed using a sub-wavelength periodic structure to transmit a single TE propagating mode with very high second order dispersion. Next, an innovative approach for decoupling waveguide trajectories from Bragg gratings is outlined and used to obtain a uniform second-order dispersion response while minimizing fabrication limitations. Finally, high Q-factor microcavities are coupled into axisymmetric pillar structures that offer extremely high group delay over very narrow transmission bandwidths. While these three novel filters are quite diverse in their operation and target applications, they offer extremely compact structures given the magnitude of the dispersion or group delay they introduce to an incident signal. They are also designed and structured as to be formed on an optical wafer scale using standard integrated circuit fabrication techniques. A number of frequency-domain numerical simulation methods are developed to fully characterize and model each of the different filters. The complete filter response, which includes the dispersion and delay characteristics and optical coupling, is used to evaluate each filter design concept. However, due to the complex nature of the structure geometries and electromagnetic interactions, an iterative optimization approach is required to improve the structure designs and obtain a suitable response. To this end, a Particle Swarm Optimization algorithm is developed and applied to the simulated filter responses to generate optimal filter designs.

Design and Fabrication of Optical Filters for Selected Laser Frequencies

Design and Fabrication of Optical Filters for Selected Laser Frequencies
Author: Samuel J. Holmes
Publisher:
Total Pages: 13
Release: 1965
Genre:
ISBN:

Efforts were continued on a program to design and fabricate optical filters at three different laser wavelengths: the 6328 A helium-neon line, the 1.06 micron neodymium line, and the 3.5 micron neon-Xenon line. Filter Type I was designated to be helium-neon laser filter, centered at 6328 A with a half-power bandwidth of less than 2 A and peak transmission greater than 40%. (Author).

Simulation-Driven Modeling and Optimization

Simulation-Driven Modeling and Optimization
Author: Slawomir Koziel
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2016-02-12
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 3319275178

This edited volume is devoted to the now-ubiquitous use of computational models across most disciplines of engineering and science, led by a trio of world-renowned researchers in the field. Focused on recent advances of modeling and optimization techniques aimed at handling computationally-expensive engineering problems involving simulation models, this book will be an invaluable resource for specialists (engineers, researchers, graduate students) working in areas as diverse as electrical engineering, mechanical and structural engineering, civil engineering, industrial engineering, hydrodynamics, aerospace engineering, microwave and antenna engineering, ocean science and climate modeling, and the automotive industry, where design processes are heavily based on CPU-heavy computer simulations. Various techniques, such as knowledge-based optimization, adjoint sensitivity techniques, and fast replacement models (to name just a few) are explored in-depth along with an array of the latest techniques to optimize the efficiency of the simulation-driven design process. High-fidelity simulation models allow for accurate evaluations of the devices and systems, which is critical in the design process, especially to avoid costly prototyping stages. Despite this and other advantages, the use of simulation tools in the design process is quite challenging due to associated high computational cost. The steady increase of available computational resources does not always translate into the shortening of the design cycle because of the growing demand for higher accuracy and necessity to simulate larger and more complex systems. For this reason, automated simulation-driven design—while highly desirable—is difficult when using conventional numerical optimization routines which normally require a large number of system simulations, each one already expensive.

Active Optical Filters Based Integrated Photonic Circuits

Active Optical Filters Based Integrated Photonic Circuits
Author: Jian Tong
Publisher:
Total Pages: 108
Release: 2006
Genre: Digital filters (Mathematics)
ISBN:

This dissertation describes the simulation, fabrication, and DSP-based analysis and synthesis schemes for innovative active optical filter based integrated photonic circuits. We investigate the active optical filter based photonic devices both theoretically and experimentally. We fabricate a photonic true time delay cell by monolithically integrating waveguide splitters and Multiple Quantum Well Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers onto a single InP substrate. A 20 ns delay time is demonstrated on a single-bit true time delay device. Based on the extension of the similar system architecture, we design a direct form I realization tunable active optical filter. The frequency response of a third-order low-pass filter design example is studied and the filter coefficients are derived in terms of gains and coupler splitting ratios. The region of stable operations is derived by applying the Schur-Cohn stability test. By introducing four-port photonic couplers, we design a two-dimensional active optical lattice filter and develop the DSP-based analysis schemes for this innovative architecture.