Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
United States Of America | Issued Patent | 9,535,192 | 01/03/2017 | 2014-174 |
Background
Waveguides in optical media are an essential part of a wide variety of important optical devices. Ceramics offer high temperature and chemical stability and relatively efficient fabrication compared to glasses and single crystals thus promising to increase the application space for optical materials. These advantages have prompted investigations and various successful demonstrations of waveguide written in ceramics. A potential drawback to the widespread application of waveguide structures in ceramic-based devices is the relatively high power that is necessary to induce permanent optical changes in ceramics i.e., for waveguide writing.
Technology
The invention is a method for writing waveguides in transparent polycrystalline ceramics using femtosecond laser pulses with remarkably low energy of 5nJ. The energy used for writing these waveguide-like structures is at least three or four orders of magnitude lower than earlier reported for ceramics. The inventors have demonstrated the use of this technique in writing waveguide like structures in optically transparent Ytrria Stabilized Zirconia (YSZ) ceramics.
The low energy requirements for writing waveguides should make these optical ceramics more cooperative, efficient, and economical to industrial applications and their integration in devices.
Transparent Ytria Stabilized Zirconia
Light confinement in a waveguide like structure
ceramics, ytria stabilized ceramics, waveguides, optics, biomedical implants, polycrystalline ceramics, low energy, optical materials