Skip to main content

Photonic Crystal Sensor Measures Key Parameters Simultaneously






Twisted moiré photonic crystals — an advanced type of optical metamaterial — have shown enormous potential in the race to engineer smaller, more capable, and more powerful optical systems.

In twisted moiré photonic crystals, how the layers twist and overlap can change how the material interacts with light. By changing the twist angle and the spacing between layers, these materials can be fine-tuned to control and manipulate different aspects of light simultaneously — meaning the multiple optical components typically needed to simultaneous measure light’s phase, polarization, and wavelength could be replaced with one device.

However, researchers have been unable to integrate twisted moiré photonic crystals into devices that can actively control the twist and distance between layers in real time, severely limiting their application.

Now, researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), in collaboration with Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley, have developed an on-chip twisted moiré photonic crystal sensor that uses MEMS technology to control the gap and angle between the crystal layers in real time. The sensor can detect and collect detailed polarization and wavelength information simultaneously.

“Twisted moiré photonic crystals are promising for engineering smaller, more powerful optical systems because they offer highly tunable optical properties, precise light control, compact and scalable design, and broad application potential across various advanced photonic technologies,” said Eric Mazur, the Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at SEAS and senior author of the paper.

“Our research demonstrates how powerful these materials can be when we have precise control and establishes a scalable path towards creating comprehensive flat-optics devices suitable for versatile light manipulation and information processing tasks,” said Haoning Tang, a postdoctoral fellow at SEAS and first author of the paper.

In the researchers’ device, the layers of photonic crystals sit on vertical and rotary actuators connected to an electrode. The whole device is only a few millimeters in scale and can be fabricated using CMOS-compatible processes.

The researchers demonstrated that by using the actuators to change the distance and rotational position of the layers of photonic crystals, they could perform simultaneous hyperspectral and hyperpolarimetric imaging — meaning every pixel captured by the sensor contained information from across the electromagnetic spectrum and detailed information about the polarization state. According to the researchers, it is the first device with active tuning to demonstrate such detailed information about multiple properties of light.

“These devices could be used for a range of applications including quantum computing, data communications, satellites, or medical scans, where getting a clear image and detailed information about light and color is really important,” said Tang.

In the future, these devices would be made with even more complex tuning capabilities, including actuators with even more degrees of freedom.


Bio Photonics Research Award

Visit: biophotonicsresearch.com
Nominate Now: https://biophotonicsresearch.com/award-nomination/?ecategory=Awards&rcategory=Awardee

#MeatAnalysis #FluorescenceTech #FoodQuality #FoodSafety #SpectroscopyInFood #MeatAuthentication #RapidDetection #FoodScience #MeatFreshness #MolecularDetection #FoodIndustryInnovation #NonDestructiveTesting #FoodMonitoring #SpectroscopyApplications #QualityControl #AdvancedSpectroscopy #MeatSpoilageDetection #FoodIntegrity #SmartFoodTesting #RealTimeAnalysis #FoodAuthenticity #FoodSafetyInnovation #SpectroscopyResearch #NextGenFoodSafety #InnovativeFoodScience,

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Abrisa Technologies Acquires Agama Glass Technologies

SANTA PAULA, Calif. — Abrisa Technologies, a provider of custom glass optics and thin film coatings and a subsidiary of HEF Photonics, has acquired Agama Glass Technologies, a manufacturer of etched anti-glare glass and technical glass processing. The acquisition, Abrisa said, expands its manufacturing footprint and adds a vertically integrated solution for chemically etched anti-glare display glass. According to Abrisa, Clarksburg, West Virginia-based Agama operates North America’s only high-volume technical glass etching facility. Agama's flagship product, AgamaEtch, is used in high-performance display and optics applications. The company's 85,000 sq ft facility also offers precision glass fabrication, chemical strengthening, and silk-screen printing, serving markets such as avionics, defense, medical, industrial, and touchscreen displays. Combined with Abrisa Technologies’ and HEF Photonics’ thin-film coating and surface engineering capabilities, Agama's offerings wi...

How Biophotonics Is Harnessing Light for Health And Science

Fifty or so years ago French physicist Pierre Aigrain coined the term photonics as a research field whose goal was to use light to perform functions that traditionally fell within the typical domain of electronics, such as telecommunications, and information processing. Or maybe it was John Campbell who, in a letter sent to Gotthard Gunther in 1954, wrote, “Incidentally, I’ve decided to invent a new science — photonics. It bears the same relationship to Optics that electronics does to electrical engineering. Photonics, like electronics, will deal with the individual units; optics and EE deal with the group phenomena! And note that you can do things with electronics that are impossible in electrical engineering!” Naming rights aside, the field of photonics began in earnest between 1958 and 1960 with the invention of the maser and the laser. The laser diode followed during the 1970s, optical fibers and the erbium-doped fiber amplifier after that, and, pretty soon, the telecommunications...

Glow Up: Synthesizing Cr³⁺-Doped Phosphors!

 Glow Up: Synthesizing Cr³⁺-Doped Phosphors! Introduction : Phosphor technology is lighting the way to incredible applications in areas like biological imaging, food safety detection, and even next-generation energy solutions. One promising development involves Cr³⁺-doped Na-β"-Al₂O₃ phosphors, synthesized using a high-temperature solid-state method. In this post, we'll break down the fascinating science behind these unique materials and their exceptional thermal and luminescent properties. Understanding Cr³⁺-Doped Na-β"-Al₂O₃ Phosphors Synthesis of Na-β"-Al₂O₃ phosphors is a process that infuses Cr³⁺ ions within the material's lattice structure. Here, chromium ions enter the lattice in a trivalent state, taking up space within the Al³⁺ sites of the crystal. This occupancy isn't random; it’s carefully controlled to ensure that Cr³⁺ ions occupy specific positions within the matrix. This precise arrangement is crucial for regulating the material's luminesce...