Mechanophotonics for organic photonic integrated circuits /
"Version: 20240701"--Title page verso.Includes bibliographical references.1. Introduction -- 1.1. The nature of light waves -- 1.2. The photon nature of light -- 1.3. The polarization states of light -- 1.4. The chemistry and physics of materials -- 1.5. Nonlinear optical (NLO) properties -- 1.6. Mechanical properties of organic crystals -- 1.7. Photonic integrated circuits (PICs)2. Properties of organic PIC components -- 2.1. Waveguides -- 2.2. Optical cavities3. Mechanophotonics : mechanical micromanipulation of molecular crystals into various photonic components -- 3.1. The need for mechanophotonics -- 3.2. Mechanophotonics - mechanical micromanipulation of organic optical crystals -- 3.3. Pathways to apply crystal micromanipulation towards OPICs4. Organic single-crystal photonic components and integrated circuits -- 4.1. Curved (micro) organic waveguides -- 4.2. Directional couplers (DCs) -- 4.3. Add-drop filters (ADFs) -- 4.4. Organic crystal optical interferometers -- 4.5. Wavelength division multiplexers (WDMs) -- 4.6. LED-powered organic single-crystal optical waveguides for VLC technologies5. Crystal photonics foundry -- 5.1. Crystal photonics foundry for organic photonic integrated circuits.Full-text restricted to subscribers or individual document purchasers.This book presents the area of Mechanophotonics which is the process of fabricating organic photonic integrated circuits (OPICs) using optical crystals through atomic force microscopy. It provides the latest developments in focused ion beam milling techniques applied to organic optical crystals to construct organic photonic integrated circuits. After an introduction, the photonic components of OPICs will be presented as well as their properties. Mechanical properties of organic optical crystals are then discussed followed by the mechanical micromanipulation of organic crystals. Last, the author covers the micromanufacturing of organic crystal photonic components using focused-ion beam milling. Part of IOP Series in Advances in Optics, Photonics and Optoelectronics.Optical engineers and electrical engineers -- specifically those nanophotonics and circuits and devices. Also, crystal engineers.Also available in print.Mode of access: World Wide Web.System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader, EPUB reader, or Kindle reader.Rajadurai Chandrasekar is a Professor at the University of Hyderabad (UoH). At the UoH he explores the Interaction of Light with Organic Nano/Microsolids. His group made several original and outstanding scientific contributions toward Advanced Organic Photonic Materials and Technologies such as Organic waveguides (passive-type discovered in his lab), resonators, optical modulators, and chiral optical waveguides and resonators, and circuits. He initiated two new research fields namely, (i) Mechanophotonics - a domain that integrates mechanical micromanipulation of single crystal photonic modules towards circuits, and (ii) Crystal photonic foundry - a novel approach involving focused ion beam milling of organic single crystals to produce various organic single crystal photonic modules. He has published about 125 research papers and holds 4 international patents. He has been an elected Fellow of the Optical Society of India (2016), the Royal Society of Chemistry (2018), the Indian Academy of Sciences (2020), and the National Academy of Sciences (2023). He is an International Advisory Board Member of several prominent Materials Chemistry and Materials Science journals such as Journal of Materials Chemistry C, Materials Advances, Advanced Optical Materials, ACS Applied Engineering Materials, and Small.Title from PDF title page (viewed on August 1, 2024).
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