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Using effective medium theories to design tailored nanocomposite materials for optical systems

Authors :
Werdehausen, Daniel
Staude, Isabelle
Burger, Sven
Petschulat, Jörg
Scharf, Toralf
Pertsch, Thomas
Decker, Manuel
Source :
Proc. SPIE 10745, 107450H (2018)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Modern optical systems are subject to very restrictive performance, size and cost requirements. Especially in portable systems size often is the most important factor, which necessitates elaborate designs to achieve the desired specifications. However, current designs already operate very close to the physical limits and further progress is difficult to achieve by changing only the complexity of the design. Another way of improving the performance is to tailor the optical properties of materials specifically to the application at hand. A class of novel, customizable materials that enables the tailoring of the optical properties, and promises to overcome many of the intrinsic disadvantages of polymers, are nanocomposites. However, despite considerable past research efforts, these types of materials are largely underutilized in optical systems. To shed light into this issue we, in this paper, discuss how nanocomposites can be modeled using effective medium theories. In the second part, we then investigate the fundamental requirements that have to be fulfilled to make nanocomposites suitable for optical applications, and show that it is indeed possible to fabricate such a material using existing methods. Furthermore, we show how nanocomposites can be used to tailor the refractive index and dispersion properties towards specific applications.<br />Comment: This is a draft manuscript of a paper published in Proc. SPIE (Proceedings Volume 10745, Current Developments in Lens Design and Optical Engineering XIX, Event: SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications, 2018)

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics - Optics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Proc. SPIE 10745, 107450H (2018)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1810.10265
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2320525