573 research outputs found

    Optical Microring Resonators for Photoacoustic Imaging and Detection.

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    This work is to utilize the superior characteristics of polymer microring resonators in ultrasound detection to push the application of photoacoustic imaging to an entirely new level. We first demonstrated significantly improved imaging quality for photoacoustic tomography (PAT) using microring detectors. For wideband PAT, the microring detectors were able to faithfully detect both the boundaries and the inner structure, while piezoelectric detectors can only preserve one of the two aspects. For high-resolution PAT over a large imaging area, we imaged 50 µm black beads and found that microrings produced high-resolution imaging over a 16-mm-diameter imaging area while the 500 µm piezoelectric detectors only obtained high-resolution imaging over a small area around center. Pure optical photoacoustic microscopy (PAM) has been demonstrated. Microring ultrasonic resonators were applied in in vivo photoacoustic imaging for the first time. Good imaging signal-to-noise ratio and high axial resolution of 8 µm were calibrated. As a comparison, a commercial hydrophone with similar sensitivity produced a low axial resolution of 105 µm. A 5 mm miniaturized probe consisting of a fiber to deliver excitation laser pulses and microring detectors for ultrasound detection has been fabricated for photoacoustic endoscopy. The calibrated high radial resolution of 21 µm was higher than other types of endoscopic photoacoustic probes, around 40 µm or larger. A photoacoustic correlation spectroscopy (PACS) technique was proposed. In a proof-of-concept experiment, we demonstrated low-speed flow measurement of ~15 µm/s by the PACS technique. We also demonstrated in vivo flow speed measurement of red blood cells in capillaries in a chick embryo model by PACS. Other techniques might have difficulties to measure it due to the low signal contrast and/or poor resolutions. We also proposed terahertz electromagnetic pulse detection by photoacoustic method. We used carbon nanotube composites as efficient photoacoustic transmitters and microrings as sensitive detectors. The photoacoustic method provides low-cost and real-time terahertz detection (~µs), which is difficult by conventional terahertz detectors, such as a bolometer or a pyroelectric detector.Ph.D.Electrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91497/1/chensll_1.pd

    Harnessing optical micro-combs for microwave photonics

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    In the past decade, optical frequency combs generated by high-Q micro-resonators, or micro-combs, which feature compact device footprints, high energy efficiency, and high-repetition-rates in broad optical bandwidths, have led to a revolution in a wide range of fields including metrology, mode-locked lasers, telecommunications, RF photonics, spectroscopy, sensing, and quantum optics. Among these, an application that has attracted great interest is the use of micro-combs for RF photonics, where they offer enhanced functionalities as well as reduced size and power consumption over other approaches. This article reviews the recent advances in this emerging field. We provide an overview of the main achievements that have been obtained to date, and highlight the strong potential of micro-combs for RF photonics applications. We also discuss some of the open challenges and limitations that need to be met for practical applications.Comment: 32 Pages, 13 Figures, 172 Reference

    Photonic molecules and spectral engineering

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    This chapter reviews the fundamental optical properties and applications of pho-tonic molecules (PMs) - photonic structures formed by electromagnetic coupling of two or more optical microcavities (photonic atoms). Controllable interaction between light and matter in photonic atoms can be further modified and en-hanced by the manipulation of their mutual coupling. Mechanical and optical tunability of PMs not only adds new functionalities to microcavity-based optical components but also paves the way for their use as testbeds for the exploration of novel physical regimes in atomic physics and quantum optics. Theoretical studies carried on for over a decade yielded novel PM designs that make possible lowering thresholds of semiconductor microlasers, producing directional light emission, achieving optically-induced transparency, and enhancing sensitivity of microcavity-based bio-, stress- and rotation-sensors. Recent advances in material science and nano-fabrication techniques make possible the realization of optimally-tuned PMs for cavity quantum electrodynamic experiments, classical and quantum information processing, and sensing.Comment: A review book chapter: 29 pages, 19 figure

    Real-time label-free biosensing with integrated planar waveguide ring resonators

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    We review the use of planar integrated optical waveguide ring resonators for label free bio-sensing and present recent results from two European biosensor collaborations: SABIO and InTopSens. Planar waveguide ring resonators are attractive for label-free biosensing due to their small footprint, high Q-factors, and compatibility with on-chip optics and microfluidics. This enables integrated sensor arrays for compact labs-on-chip. One application of label-free sensor arrays is for point-of-care medical diagnostics. Bringing such powerful tools to the single medical practitioner is an important step towards personalized medicine, but requires addressing a number of issues: improving limit of detection, managing the influence of temperature, parallelization of the measurement for higher throughput and on-chip referencing, efficient light-coupling strategies to simplify alignment, and packaging of the optical chip and integration with microfluidics. From the SABIO project we report refractive index measurement and label-free biosensing in an 8-channel slotwaveguide ring resonator sensor array, within a compact cartridge with integrated microfluidics. The sensors show a volume sensing detection limit of 5 × 10-6 RIU and a surface sensing detection limit of 0.9 pg/mm2. From the InTopSens project we report early results on silicon-on-insulator racetrack resonators
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