1 / 20

Hollow Waveguides

Hollow Waveguides. 光電 100 F84966119 侯昕華. Outline. Introduction Basis of Hollow Waveguides Structures of Hollow Waveguides Metal-Tube Waveguides Plastic-Tube waveguides Hollow Glass Waveguides Hollow Waveguides with ODR Applications References. Introduction. Hollow Waveguides.

evita
Télécharger la présentation

Hollow Waveguides

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HollowWaveguides 光電100 F84966119 侯昕華

  2. Outline • Introduction • BasisofHollowWaveguides • StructuresofHollowWaveguides • Metal-TubeWaveguides • Plastic-Tubewaveguides • HollowGlassWaveguides • HollowWaveguideswithODR • Applications • References

  3. Introduction HollowWaveguides

  4. Introduction • The principle of total internal reflection, which operates in water stream, can be used for bringing the light to proper destination by a glass tube. • On this basis the light can be delivered by a fiber or by a hollow waveguide. • For the visible and low power level optical the fibers are a good solution for the delivery system.

  5. Introduction • The transmission of light through an ordinary glass fiber is limited by the spectral transmission of glass. It is not transparent in the UV region and in the infrared region. • The maximum energy transmitted through the fiber is determined by the air breakdown and by the damage threshold of the fiber front surface and the bulk. • And such waveguide structures suffer the fundamental limitations associated with light propagation through solids, such as dispersion, absorption, scattering and nonlinear effects.

  6. Introduction • A possible solution can be the fiber having its core formed by the air, i.e., hollow waveguides. • By using highly reflective walls in a hollow core, the light can be constrained to form a waveguide.

  7. BasisofHollowWaveguides HollowWaveguides

  8. BasisofHollowWaveguides • According to the effective index of refraction coefficient value the hollow waveguides can be grouped into two categories: • “Leaky” waveguides whose wall materials have refractive indices greater than one (nwall>1). • “Attenuated total reflectance ” (ATR) waveguides whose wall is composed of dielectric materials with refractive indices less than one in the wavelength region of interest (nwall<1).

  9. BasisofHollowWaveguides • The basis of hollow waveguides is a tube, which can be made of plastic, metal, special or ordinary glass or crystal.

  10. Structures ofHollow Waveguides Hollow Waveguides

  11. StructuresofHollowWaveguides • Metal-Tube Waveguides

  12. StructuresofHollowWaveguides • Plastic-Tube Waveguides

  13. StructuresofHollowWaveguides • Hollow Glass Waveguides

  14. StructuresofHollowWaveguides • Hollow Waveguides with Omni-Directional Reflector

  15. Applications Hollow Waveguides

  16. Applications • Applications of hollow waveguides fall into two broad categories: laser power delivery and fiber sensors. • The use of hollow glass or metallic waveguides to deliver laser power has largely been relegated to laser surgery where the required power is less than 100 W.

  17. Applications • As sensors, hollow waveguides are generally used either to transmit blackbody radiation for temperature measurements or as an active or passive link for chemical sensing. • The hollow waveguides may be used merely as a passive fiber link from the chemical processing area to a remote detector, or they may play a more active role in which the guide is filled with the gas to be sensed.

  18. References Hollow Waveguides

  19. References • Helena, J., Michal, N., Jan, S., Pavel, C., Mitsunobu, M., Yi-Wei, S., et al. (2004). Hollow waveguide delivery systems for laser technological application. Progress in Quantum Electronics, 28, 145-164. • Hollow Waveguides - IR Fiber Review. (n.d.). From Specialty Fiber Optics: irfibers.rutgers.edu/ir_rev_hgw.html • James, H. A. (2000). A Review of IR Transmitting, Hollow Waveguides. Fiber and Integrated Optics , 211-227. • Mihai, I., Steven, J. G., Marin, S., J. D., J., Yoel, F., Ori, W., et al. (2003). Analysis of mode structure in hollow dielectric waveguide fibers. PHYSICAL REVIEW E, 67, 046608-1-046608-8. • Shih-Shou, L., Chii-Chang, C., Shih-Chieh, H., & Cheng-Yi, L. (2006). Fabricating a Hollow Optical Waveguide for Optical Communication Applications. JOURNAL OF MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS, 15 (3), 584-587. • Shih-Shou, L., Mou-Sian, W., & Chii-Chang, C. (2004). Semiconductor hollow optical waveguides formed by omni-directional reflectors. OPTICS EXPRESS, 12, 6589-6593. • Total internal reflection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (2010). Retrieved from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_reflection • Waveguide (electromagnetism) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (2010). Retrieved from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waveguide_(electromagnetism)

  20. Hollow Waveguides 謝謝! 多謝! An-zi-say! Thank youvery much!

More Related