Showing posts with label CLEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CLEO. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Terahertz work wins student paper competition at CLEO


http://www.electrooptics.com/news/news_story.php?news_id=2185

Fabian Langer of University of Regensburg, Germany has won the annual Maiman Outstanding Student Paper Competition at CLEO 2014.
Langer won for his paper ‘CEP control of dynamical Bloch oscillations in a bulk semiconductor via ultra-intense multi-THz fields’. The grand prize of $3,000 and two honourable mentions were presented during the plenary talks and awards ceremony on 10 June at CLEO: 2014.
There were 965 submissions reviewed and scored by the CLEO 2014 technical programme committee, which selected 28 semi-finalists. Six finalists were chosen, who presented their research in a private session at the show. The presentations were judged based on innovation, research excellence and presentation ability.
Honourable mentions went to: Matthias Lauermann at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany, for the paper ‘16QAM silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) modulator operating with 0.6 Vpp and 19 fJ/bit at 112 Gbit/s’, and Kevin O’Brien at the University of California, Berkeley, US, for the paper ‘Phase mismatch – free nonlinear propagation in optical zero-index materials’.
The Maiman Outstanding Student Paper Competition honours American physicist Theodore Maiman for his invention of the first working laser, and his other outstanding contributions to optics and photonics. It recognises student innovation and research excellence in the areas of laser technology and electro-optics. The award is endowed by a grant from HRL Laboratories, the IEEE Photonics Society and the APS Division of Laser Science and is administered by the OSA Foundation.
Additionally, 10 students received travel grants to attend CLEO 2014 as recipients of the Incubic/Milton Chang Student Travel Grants.

Related internet links

Monday, June 2, 2014

CLEO: 2014 - the Premier International Lasers and Electro-Optics Event - Takes Place in San Jose Next Week


With Business-Focused Programming, New Research Findings and 1,900 Technical 
Presentations, CLEO: 2014 is the Laser Industry’s Most Influential and Innovative Forum

WHAT:  Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO: 2014)

http://www.osa.org/en-us/about_osa/newsroom/news_releases/2014/cleo_2014_-_the_premier_international_lasers_and_e/

WHEN/WHERE:  June 8 - 13 (Exhibits open June 10-12) at the San Jose Convention Center, San Jose, California, USA.

DETAILS:  CLEO: 2014, the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics, is the premier international forum for scientific and technical optics providing the full range of critical developments in the field, showcasing the most significant milestones from laboratory to marketplace. Well-known for its world-renowned peer-reviewed program, CLEO unites the field of lasers and electro-optics by bringing together all aspects of laser technology and offers high-quality content featuring breakthrough research and applied innovations.

Featuring:
  • 250 participating companies in the laser and electro-optics industry
  • Comprehensive technical  research program featuring hundreds of scientific sessions covering the most important technical developments, including hot topic areas such as photonics for brain mapping, molecular imaging, high-power lasers, nanophotonics, optofluidics, nonlinear optics, quantum optics and more.

PRESS HIGHLIGHTS:

Plenary Sessions
Tuesday, June 10, 8:15 a.m. and Wednesday, June 11, 8:30 a.m., San Jose Convention Center
CLEO: 2014 hosts two Plenary Sessions featuring keynote addresses from laser science luminaries across the globe:

Tuesday’s Keynotes:
  • Gerhard Rempe, Max-Planck-Institut fur Quantenoptik, Germany
“Quantum Coherent Networks”
  •  Larry A. Coldren, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
“Photonic Integrated Circuits as Key Enablers for Datacom, Telecom and Sensor Systems”

Wednesday Keynote:
  • David Payne, University of Southampton, UK
“Fibers and the Future”

Special Symposia
Monday, June 9 – Friday, June 13, San Jose Convention Center and Marriott San Jose
This year’s 15 Special Symposia represent a broad range of topics such as neurophotonics, photonics for miniaturization, silicon photonic integration, laser processing for consumer electronics and nanobiophotonics, as well as a Special Symposium in Memory of James Gordon and the Howard Schlossberg Retirement Symposium.

Post-Deadline Paper Session
Thursday, June 12, 8 – 10 p.m., Marriott San Jose 
Post-deadline papers give conference attendees the opportunity to hear new and significant research in rapidly advancing areas at the earliest possible opportunity. The post-deadline session highlights only those papers judged to be truly excellent and compelling in their timeliness.

CLEO: Expo
Tuesday, June 10 – Thursday, June 12, San Jose Convention Center
In addition to the 250 participating companies from across the globe, CLEO: Expo features show floor programming that highlights business trends and market applications.
 
Tuesday, June 10 and Wednesday, June 11, Exhibit Hall, San Jose Convention Center
Part of the CLEO: Applications & Technology program, these sessions focus on the latest trends in the photonics marketplace. A key feature of the program will be a survey of market trends and market sector outlook. Panel topics include:
 
  • Emerging Mid-Infrared Market Opportunities: Air Quality Monitoring Related to Energy Extraction
  • The Solid-State Lighting Revolution: How LEDs are Transforming the $75 Billion Lighting Market
  • Operational Strategies for the Laser and Photonics Industry
  • The Future of “Enabling” Photonics Innovation
 
Tuesday, June 10 – Thursday, June 12, Exhibit Hall, San Jose Convention Center
The CLEO: Expo Technology Playground features hands-on demonstrations from select CLEO: Expo exhibitors. Attendees will get to interact one-on-one with products and innovations from companies including attocube systems, Aurea Technology, Edmund Optics, IDEX Optics and Photonics, Menlo Systems, Newport Corporation, Optimax and more. The program also features a contest where participants can win an Apple gift card.
 
Thursday, June 12, 9:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., Exhibit Hall, San Jose Convention Center
New to the Technology Transfer Program this year is a Pitch Panel for entrepreneurs to showcase their technology, explain why it is valuable and discuss the next steps to commercialization. In addition, the program will continue to provide a tutorial for those that want to learn more about the licensing process—funding, entrepreneurship, technology transfer and intellectual property. In addition, organizations will feature their license-ready technologies at tabletop displays in the exhibit hall.

OSA Laser Therapeutics Workshop
Wednesday, June 11, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., San Jose Convention Center
Collocated with CLEO: 2014, this workshop from The Optical Society (OSA) is hosted by two renowned scientists in the field of laser therapeutics: Rox Anderson, Harvard Medical School & Massachusetts General Hospital and Adela Ben-Yakar, University of Texas at Austin. The program will bring together leading scientists and clinicians in the optical diagnostics and laser therapeutics areas to cover topics such as unsolved problems for clinical laser surgery, the role of skin optics in laser diagnostics and therapy, plasmonic nanobubbles for detecting and treating incurable cancer, robotics-assisted laser surgery and more.

100GbE per Lambda for Data Center Workshop
Thursday, June 12, 9:30 a.m. – 7:30 p.m., and Friday, June 13, 9 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., San Jose Convention Center
OIDA and the Ethernet Alliance are partnering to host a workshop, collocated with CLEO: 2014, on 100GbE single-channel interconnects for data center networks. The workshop aims to address the challenge of commercializing single-channel 100GbE optical communications and will address whether 100GbE will or will not happen, especially with regard to other technical approaches, such as parallel channels.

CLEO: Applications & Technology - The CLEO: Applications & Technology program explores the intersection of academic research with product commercialization. Featured session talks include:
 
  • “Clinical Translation and Discovery with Near-infrared Fluorescence Lymphatic Imaging,” by John Rasmussen, University of Texas Health Science Center, USA, Monday, June 9, 8 a.m., Marriott San Jose

CLEO: Science & Innovations – The “classic” CLEO program that for more than 35 years has covered applied research and innovations in lasers, optical materials, and photonic devices. Hot topics to be covered this year include laser processing of materials, terahertz technologies, high-field and ultrafast optics, and biophotonics. A featured session talk includes:
 
  • “3-D Visualization of Dental Anatomy in Ancient Fossil Vertebrates by Using Third Harmonic Generation Microscopy,” by Yu-Cheng Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan, Thursday, June 12, 2:45 p.m., Marriott San Jose

CLEO: QELS – Fundamental Science – The Quantum Electronics and Laser Science (QELS) program continues to be the premier venue for discussion of fundamental research in optical and laser physics-related areas.  More recent additions include fields such as quantum information science, nanophotonics, and metamaterials. A featured session talk includes:
 
  • “Hand-Held Plasmonic Biosensor for High-Throughput Sensing for Point-of-Care Applications,” by Arif E. Cetin, Boston University,USA and EPFL, Switzerland, Monday, June 9, 2 p.m., San Jose Convention Center
  • “Transparent Displays Enabled by Resonant Nanoparticle Scattering,” by Chia Wei Hsu, MIT and Harvard University, USA,Wednesday, June 11, 4:30 p.m., San Jose Convention Center

PRESS REGISTRATION: A Press Room for credentialed press and analysts will be located on-site in the San Jose Convention Center, June 8 - 12. Media interested in attending the event should register on the CLEO website or contact Lyndsay Meyer at 202.416.1435 or lmeyer@osa.org.

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Lyndsay Meyer, 202.416.1435, lmeyer@osa.org
Angela Stark, 202.416.1443, astark@osa.org
Nadine Tosk, 847.920.9858, nadinepr@gmail.com

About CLEO
With a distinguished history as the industry's leading event on laser science, the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO) is where laser technology was first introduced. CLEO unites the field of lasers and electro-optics by bringing together all aspects of laser technology, with content stemming from basic research to industry application. CLEO: Expo showcases the latest products and applications from more than 300 participating companies from around the world, providing hands-on demonstrations of the latest market innovations and applications. The Expo also offers valuable on-floor programming, including Market Focus and the Technology Transfer program.

Managed by The Optical Society (OSA) and sponsored by the American Physical Society's (APS) Laser Science Division, the IEEE Photonics Society and OSA, CLEO provides the full range of critical developments in the field, showcasing the most significant milestones from laboratory to marketplace. With an unparalleled breadth and depth of coverage, CLEO connects all of the critical vertical markets in lasers and electro-optics. For more information, visit the event website atwww.cleoconference.org. CLEO: 2014 takes place June 8 – 13 at the San Jose Convention Center.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

KMLabs Receives 2013 CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Award


http://callcenterinfo.tmcnet.com/news/2013/04/23/7083542.htm
WASHINGTON --(Business Wire)--
The CLEO: 2013 co-sponsors (APS, IEEE (News - Alert) Photonics Society, OSA) and Laser Focus World today announced KMLabs (Kapteyn-Murnane Laboratories) as the winner of this year's CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Award. The award recognizes the company "for the development of the Wyvern-HE: A smaller, single-stage, single-pump Ti:sapphire ultrafast amplifier delivering performance (9mJ at 1kHz, with adjustable repetition rate) that has historically only been possible with much larger and more expensive multi-stage designs." KMLabs will accept the award at the CLEO Plenary Session Tuesday, June 11 at 8 a.m. in the San Jose Civic Auditorium.
The Wyvern-HE. Photo courtesy KMLabs.
The Wyvern-HE. Photo courtesy KMLabs.
KMLabs says the motivation for the Wyvern-HE was provided by researchers at JILA, a joint institute of the University of Colorado at Boulder and the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology, who needed high-energy pulses with excellent beam quality to pump an Optical Parametric Amplifier (OPA). Multi-millijoule, OPA pulses in the 1.3 - 2µm range could then be used to generate ultrafast, coherent, high harmonic x-rays for a host of applications in nano and molecular science. Additional applications include fundamental materials and surface science, attosecond science, pump-probe studies in chemistry and physics, and imaging and spectroscopy applications.
The Wyvern-HE design uses proprietary cryogenic cooling and regenerative amplification well beyond today's commercial norms, which allow it to achieve performance levels unmatched by competitive offerings. It provides an unprecedented pulse energy specification of more than 9 mJ with less than 45 fs pulse duration at a 1 kHz repetition rate, again using a single, compact regenerative amplification stage. Competitive single-stage amplifiers currently offer up to 5 mJ pulse energies compared to 9 mJ from the Wyvern-HE. The peak power of the pulses in this system can reach as high as 0.2 TW, a new record peak power for output directly from a single-stage amplifier. Additionally, because of the simple design and reduced components, the new system is 50 percent smaller and 40 percent less expensive than current multi-stage ultrafast amplifier systems performing at the same level. According to KMLabs, further innovations in the Wyvern-HE series are possible as qualified pump lasers become available.
"The Wyvern-HE continues our push to lead the industry with state-of-the-art perfrmance, while simultaneously simplifying systems for the scientists doing the work. For broader appeal, as these systems become more powerful, they must also become more flexible, user-friendly and reliable," said Henry Kapteyn, founder and CEO of KMLabs. "KMLabs greatly appreciates the relationship we've had over the years with OSA, APS and the IEEE. Our plan is to continue making exciting new products that will lead to exciting new discoveries for the researchers in those societies."

Honorable mentions include:

  •  Femtolasers Produktions GmbH
    First portable ultrafast Ti:Sapphire laser for biomedical applications
    For the development of the INTEGRALTM CoreTM, the smallest commercially available sub-8 fs ultrafast Ti:Sapphire laser delivering 200 mW average power with 300 MHz pulse repetition rate for Terahertz, multiphoton microscopy, OCT, and spectroscopy applications.
  • Princeton Instruments
    IsoPlane next-generation, aberration-free spectrograph
    For the development of the IsoPlane SCT 320 Schmidt-Czerny-Turner spectrograph that overcomes the limitations of traditional Czerny-Turner designs by totally eliminating field astigmatism and greatly reducing coma and spherical aberration.
  • TAG Optics
    TAG Lens 2.0: Using sound to shape light
    For the development of an ultra-high-speed varifocal lens that can extend the depth-of-field of conventional optical systems and enable user-selected focal lengths in micro-seconds through acoustic refractive-index changes.
"The CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Awards recognize some of the most exciting, cutting-edge technologies in the laser and electro-optics industry today," said Conard Holton, editor-in-chief, Laser Focus World. "This year we saw a notable increase in the number of submissions and the selection process was highly competitive. The products being honored by CLEO and Laser Focus World provide us a glimpse of the potential future of the field. We'd like to congratulate the honorable mentions and KMLabs on their award-winning ultrafast amplifier."
The annual CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Awards Program honors the most timely, ground-breaking products in the field of laser science. Designed to showcase some of the most significant new products in the field, Innovation Award entries are evaluated on criteria critical to product success, such as innovation, functionality and life expectancy.
For more information on the CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Awards, visit the CLEO: 2013 website.


Monday, May 14, 2012

Dr. Daniel Mittleman exclusive comments on his impressions regarding the CLEO 2012 Conference





Hi Randy,
I just got back from the CLEO conference where there was a lot of activity in THz-related stuff on the agenda.  The busiest research areas include terahertz plasmonics and metamaterials, terahertz materials spectroscopy research, and the development of new techniques for producing and controlling terahertz waves, of both the broadband time-domain variety and the narrowband variety such as quantum cascade lasers and parametric generation sources.
One of the hot areas in research these days is the generation of high intensity terahertz pulses.  The behavior of many materials in high-amplitude fields can be quite different from what one observes in the (usual) low intensity regime, since the response can be non-linear.  There are several new methods (within the last few years) for reaching this non-linear regime, and they are generating a lot of excitement.  For example, it is now possible to produce a terahertz pulse with an energy of a few microjoules (or even more) using optimized frequency conversion of high-intensity visible light pulses.  (Microjoules may not sound like much, but here's the relevant comparison: the 'conventional' method for generating terahertz pulses produces energies in the FEMTOjoule range - so this is an increase in the pulse energy of something like a factor of a billion.)  The generation of these high intensity pulses and their use in studying materials are real growth areas in the field.
As this is primarily an academic conference, the vendors and commercial interests usuallly have a pretty low profile at the technical sessions.  But, for example, the Picometrix system was prominently featured in one interesting talk on the use of THz imaging for studying neolithic wall paintings (at a site in Turkey) which have been covered over with layers of plaster (i.e., using the THz to see through the plaster to the paintings underneath).  Several other vendors had their terahertz spectrometers running on the floor of the trade show (e.g., Menlo Systems), or had terahertz systems prominently featured in their displays.  There was also a lot of discussion of the upcoming OTST (Optical Terahertz Science and Technology) conference, which will be held in Kyoto Japan in April 2013.  I expect that meeting to be very well attended, and well supported by various Japanese companies.
From the academic's perspective, the field is healthy and growing.
Regards,
Dan

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

CLEO/Laser Focus World INNOVATION AWARDS: Terahertz scanning reflectometer from Applied Research & Photonics takes top award


The 2011 CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Awards program is designed to honor groundbreaking products in the field of photonics and laser science. The awards are sponsored by Laser Focus World magazine and the Optical Society’s (OSA; Washington, DC) Conference on Lasers and Electro Optics (CLEO) program.
Innovation Awards entrants are challenged to show how their application, service, or product (launched between September 2009 and March 2011) meets criteria such as significant impact to the photonics industry, excellent functionality and long life expectancy, secure patent position, and an exceptional level of innovation.
The awards were presented at the CLEO 2011 Plenary Session in Baltimore, MD. Information on the Innovation Awards can be found online at http://bit.ly/kJfZPa.
INNOVATION AWARD WINNER
Applied Research & Photonics (Harrisburg, PA)
The 2011 CLEO/Laser Focus World Innovation Award winner was Applied Research & Photonics for its highly sensitive, low-power terahertz scanning reflectometer for direct measurement of diffusion gradients and permeation kinetics of materials including biological tissues, in real time. Before launch of its terahertz instrument, Applied Research & Photonics says there was no single instrument that provided measurement of both the concentration gradient of a permeating ingredient across the thickness of a substrate (such as skin tissue) and the rate (kinetics) of the permeation. The noninvasive reflectometer provides both measurements in real time.
Click to Enlarge
Using the difference frequency method, a continuous-wave terahertz signal is generated and directed to a sample at a 90º angle by an off-axis parabolic reflector. A motion controller scans the beam through the sample thickness, and a detection system records the reflected signal both with and without the permeating ingredient in real time while the permeating ingredient is diffusing. Computations using the reflection data yield both concentration of the permeation ingredient and its diffusion rate over time.
In addition to measuring diffusion coefficients for life-science applications, the reflectometer can also be applied to the optics and semiconductor industries—without the need for fluorescence or radioisotope labeling. For more information, go to http://arphotonics.net.
HONORABLE MENTIONS
AdValue Photonics (Tucson, AZ)
The first commercially available Q-switched fiber laser operating at 2 µm from AdValue Photonics enables new applications in light detection and ranging (lidar), sensing, and materials processing. Operating at an eye-safe wavelength, the fiber laser can also be used to generate 3–5 µm mid-infrared (mid-IR) radiation for environmental monitoring and IR countermeasures applications, or as a seed laser for high-power amplification.
Click to Enlarge
Its adjustable pulse repetition rate from 1 Hz to 30 kHz and 20–50 ns pulsewidth delivers 100 mW average power at 20 kHz, opening up new application possibilities that require a pulsed, high-peak-power source. For more information, go towww.advaluephotonics.com.
ID Quantique (Geneva, Switzerland)
An advanced system for single-photon detection from ID Quantique can be used for cryptography, eye-safe lidar, and single-photon source characterization applications. Its innovation lies in the system’s ability to operate at high speeds up to 100 MHz in free-running mode, without requiring cryogenic cooling.
Click to Enlarge
The indium-gallium-arsenide (InGaAs) fiber-coupled avalanche photodiode (APD) accounts for its <200 ps timing jitter; most commercially available detectors strive to reach 300 ps levels. The system has adjustable photon-detection probability, adjustable delays, gatewidth, and deadtime. A two-channel auxiliary event counter allows singlemode or multimode fiber input and is compatible with homemade photon detection systems in the scientific and industrial community. For more information, go to www.idquantique.com.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Latest news from CLEO 2011 on terahertz “invisibility cloak"




Scatterings image
Perspective view of the terahertz cloaking structure made by researchers from Northwestern University and Oklahoma State University.

Patricia Daukantas
http://www.osa-opn.org/OpenContent/NewsRoom/Broadband-Terahertz-Cloaking-at-CLEO2011.aspx
Scientists from two U.S. universities have created a three-dimensional terahertz-spectrum “invisibility cloak” that hides a bump from a wide range of radiation frequencies.
The six-member group, led by Cheng Sun of Northwestern University, reported its results at the CLEO:2011 conference in Baltimore, Md. (U.S.A.). Three of the researchers are from Oklahoma State University.
The terahertz cloak is reminiscent of the “carpet bump” cloak devised in the near-infrared region by a German team (see OPN, June 2010, p. 7). From a distance, the device looks almost like a polymer resin near-cube cut in half diagonally.
Sun and his colleagues used a technique called “projection microstereolithography” to fabricate a varying array of holes through the resin block. The size of the holes changes around the negative “bump” on the bottom side of the block, so that the refractive index of the cloak increases in the vicinity of the bump.
The researchers coated the side containing the bump with a 200-nm-thick layer of gold to provide a reflecting surface. Then they shone broadband terahertz radiation into the block at an incident angle of 45 degrees with respect to the reflecting surface. Underneath the bump, they placed a block of pressed lactose powder, which has a strong absorption feature at 0.53 THz. They performed similar tests with a flat reflecting surface, a chunk of lactose covered by a non-cloaking reflecting surface and a bare chunk of lactose.
Imaging of the reflected terahertz light showed that the cloaked block of lactose showed the same spectroscopic signature as the flat reflecting surface—no scattering or absorption of the rays. According to the researchers, the result demonstrates that the cloak has hidden both the geometrical and spectroscopic signatures of the concealed material.
Previous cloaking studies have focused on the microwave and optical regions of the spectrum, leaving a gap at terahertz frequencies—a spectroscopically interesting band that researchers have been studying intensely for potential security and industrial applications.






Tuesday, April 26, 2011

3-D Terahertz Cloaking,Green UV sterilization,and MEGa-rays for nuclear detection


Research to be presented at CLEO: 2011 highlights latest advances in laser science

 IMAGE: Close-up micrograph of the bump region of the Terahertz cloaking structure. The size variations in the holes, which extend through the entire structure, is a key feature that guides...
Click here for more information.
WASHINGTON, April 26—The world's foremost researchers in laser science, optoelectronics and quantum optics will present their findings at the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO: 2011), May 1 – 6 at the Baltimore Convention Center. The more than 1,700 presentations at the conference will cover areas from energy and biophotonics to ultrafast lasers and quantum communication. Below is a sampling of the premiere research that will be presented next week at CLEO: 2011 (www.cleoconference.org).
  • Green UV Sterilization: Switching on LEDs to Save Energy and the Environment
  • Nuclear Photonics: Gamma Rays Search For Concealed Nuclear Threats
  • 3-D Terahertz Cloaking
  • Full 3-D Invisibility Cloak in Visible Light
Green UV Sterilization: Switching on LEDs to Save Energy and the Environment
Ultraviolet light can safely sterilize food, water and medical equipment by disrupting the DNA and other reproductive molecules in harmful bacteria. Traditionally, mercury lamps have supplied this UV light, however mercury release from power generation and lamp disposal have generated discussion of harmful environmental impact. A potentially energy efficient and non-toxic alternative is the light-emitting diode, or LED, which can be made to emit at almost any desired wavelength. LEDs are also more rugged and operate at lower voltages than glass containing mercury bulbs. Thus, LEDs are more compatible with portable water disinfection units, which could also be solar-powered and used in situations where centralized facilities are not available, such as disaster relief. LEDs currently require a lot of electricity to produce UV light, but researchers from around the world are focused on improving this efficiency.
LEDs are semiconductor devices that operate in much the same way as the tiny elements on a computer chip. The difference is that some of the electrons flowing into an LED are captured and release their energy as light. Because these are solid materials rather than gas-filled bulbs, LEDs are more compact and durable than alternative light sources. The first commercial LEDs were small red indicator lights, but engineers have developed new materials that emit in a rainbow of colors. Nitride-based LEDs are the most promising for pushing beyond the visible into the ultraviolet. Some of these UV LEDs are already being used in the curing of ink and the testing for counterfeit money, but for sterilization, shorter wavelength light is required. These short wavelength, or "Deep UV" LEDs, present a number of technical challenges and are predominantly implemented in highly-specialized disinfection systems in industrial and medical applications, as well as other non-disinfection markets.
The Joint Symposium on Semiconductor Ultraviolet LEDs and Lasers at CLEO: 2011 will feature several talks addressing these challenges, while highlighting current efforts to improve the efficiency of nitride-based LEDs. Max Shatalov of Sensor Electronic Technology in Columbia, S.C., will report an improved design for making high-power UV LEDs that would be especially good for knocking out bacteria. From the birthplace of nitride (blue and white) LEDs, Motoaki Iwaya from Meijo University in Japan will describe a joint effort with Nagoya University to extend the range and improve the efficiency of UV LEDs.
The application of these UV LEDs is also being pursued in a related CLEO: 2011 session. Gordon Knight from Trojan Technologies in Canada will review advances in production of novel UV light sources, along with necessary validation procedures for verifying the operation of water disinfection systems in a one-hour tutorial.
Presentation JTuD1, "High Power III-Nitride UV Emitters," by Max Shatalov et al. is at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 3.
Presentation JTuD2, "IQE and EQE of the nitride-based UV/DUV LEDs," by Motoaki Iwaya et al. is at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, May 3.
Tutorial ATuD1, "Water and Air Treatment Using Ultraviolet Light Sources," by Gordon Knight is at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday, May 3.
Nuclear Photonics: Gamma Rays Search For Concealed Nuclear Threats
Gamma rays are the most energetic type of light wave and can penetrate through lead and other thick containers. A powerful new source of gamma rays will allow officials to search for hidden reactor fuel/nuclear bomb material.
These gamma rays, called MEGa-rays (for mono-energetic gamma rays), are made by using a beam of fast-moving electrons to convert laser photons (light at a lesser energy) into the gamma ray part of the spectrum. The incoherent gamma rays can be tuned to a specific energy so that they predominantly interact with only one kind of material. A beam of MEGa-rays, for example, might be absorbed by the nuclear fuel uranium-235 while passing through other substances including the more common (but less dangerous) isotope uranium-238. That sort of precision opens the door to "nuclear photonics," the study of nuclei with light. "It is kind of like tunable laser absorption spectroscopy but with gamma-rays," says Chris Barty of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, who will present on MEGa-rays at CLEO: 2011.
In the last couple of years, MEGa-ray prototypes have identified elements like lithium and lead hidden behind metal barriers. The next-generation of MEGa-ray machines, which should come on-line in a couple of years, will be a million times brighter, allowing them to see through thick materials to locate specific targets in less than a second.
Barty will present several MEGa-ray applications in use today and will describe the attributes of next-generation devices. Work is under way on a MEGa-ray technology that could be placed on a truck trailer and carried out into the field to check containers suspected of having bomb material in them. At nuclear reactors, MEGa-rays could be used to quickly identify how enriched a spent fuel rod is in uranium-235. They could also examine nuclear waste containers to assess their contents without ever opening them up. MEGa-ray technology might also be employed in medicine to track drugs that carry specific isotope markers.
Presentation ATuF2, "Mono-Energetic Gamma-rays (MEGa-rays) and the Dawn of Nuclear Photonics," by Chris Barty is at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 3.
3-D Terahertz Cloaking
Invisibility appears to be the next possible advance in the use of Terahertz radiation in medicine, security, and communications.
A research team from Northwestern and Oklahoma State universities claims to be first to cloak a three-dimensional object from view in a broad range of Terahertz frequency light, which lies between infrared and microwaves. In the team's paper at CLEO: 2011, Cheng Sun of Northwestern describes how a rigid sponge-like cloaking structure less than 10 millimeters long on a side was built up in 220 layers, each precisely defined to vary the index of refraction and bend light to render invisible anything located beneath a shallow concave bump on the cloak's bottom surface. The group showed that both the physical geometry and the spectrographic signature of a chemical strip about the width of 10 human hairs disappeared when cloaked.
Despite its Harry Potter-like allure, concealing tiny objects from view is not the team's ultimate goal, Sun said. Rather, this latest demonstration shows that the new "transformation optics" principles and 3-D lithography techniques they used to make the cloak can also enable optical components for guiding, collimating, and focusing terahertz light in a variety of ways—in new medical and scientific diagnostic tools, airport security scanners, and data communication devices.
Presentation, CWA5, "Three-dimensional Terahertz Cloak," by Cheng Sun et al. is at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 4.
EDITOR'S NOTE: High-resolution images and diagrams of the 3-D Terahertz cloak are available. Contact Angela Stark, astark@osa.org.
Full 3-D Invisibility Cloak in Visible Light
Watching things disappear "is an amazing experience," admits Joachim Fischer of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany. But making items vanish is not the reason he creates invisibility cloaks. Rather, the magic-like tricks are attractive demonstrations of the fantastic capabilities that new optical theories and nanotechnology construction methods now enable.
This new area, called "transformation optics," as the item just above also showed, has turned modern optical design on its ear by showing how to manipulate light in ways long thought to be impossible. They promise to improve dramatically such light-based technologies as microscopes, lenses, chip manufacturing and data communications.
In his CLEO: 2011 talk , Fischer will describe the first-ever demonstration of a three-dimensional invisibility cloak that works for visible light—red light at a wavelength of 700 nm—independent of its polarization (orientation). Previous cloaks required longer wavelength light, such as microwaves or infrared, or required the light to have a single, specific polarization.
Fischer makes the tiny cloak—less than half the cross-section of a human-hair—by direct laser writing (i.e. lithography) into a polymer material to create an intricate structure that resembles a miniature woodpile. The precisely varying thickness of the "logs" enables the cloak to bend light in new ways. The key to this achievement was incorporating several aspects of a diffraction-unlimited microscopy technique into the team's 3-D direct writing process for building the cloak. The dramatically increased resolution of the improved process enabled the team to create log spacings narrow enough to work in red light.
"If, in the future, we can halve again the log spacing of this red cloak, we could make one that would cover the entire visible spectrum," Fischer added.
Practical applications of combining transformation optics with advanced 3-D lithography (a customized version of the fabrication steps used to make microcircuits) include flat, aberration-free lenses that can be easily miniaturized for use in integrated optical chips, and optical "black holes" for concentrating and absorbing light. If the latter can also be made to work for visible light, they will be useful in solar cells, since 90 percent of the Sun's energy reaches Earth as visible and near-infrared light.
Presentation QTuG5 "Three-dimensional invisibility carpet cloak at 700 nm wavelength," by Joachim Fischer et al. is at 11 a.m. Tuesday, May 3. Fischer et al. will also present CML1, "Three-Dimensional Laser Lithography with Conceptually Diffraction-Unlimited Lateral and Axial Resolution," at 10:15 a.m. Monday, May 2.
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CLEO: 2011 Program Information
CLEO: 2011 unites the fields of lasers and optoelectronics by bringing together all aspects of laser technology, from basic research to industry applications. The main broad topics areas at the meeting are fundamental science, science and innovations, applications and technology, and market focus. An exposition featuring 300 participating companies will be held concurrently with the scientific presentations.
Plenary Session keynote speakers include Donald Keck, retired vice president of Corning, talking about making the first low-loss optical fibers; James Fujimoto of MIT, talking about medical imaging using optical coherence tomography (OCT); Mordechai (Moti) Segev of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, speaking about the localization of light; and Susumu Noda of Kyoto University, talking about the control of photons in photonic crystals.
Online resources:
Press Registration
A Press Room for credentialed press and analysts will be located on-site in the Baltimore Convention Center, Sunday, May 1 – Thursday, May 5. Media interested in attending the conference should register online athttp://www.cleoconference.org/media_center/mediaregistrationform.aspx or contact Angela Stark at 202.416.1443, astark@osa.org.
About CLEO
With a distinguished history as the industry's leading event on laser science, the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO) and the Quantum Electronics Laser Science Conference (QELS) is where laser technology was first introduced. CLEO: 2011 will unite the field of lasers and electro-optics by bringing together all aspects of laser technology, with content stemming from basic research to industry application. Sponsored by the American Physical Society's (APS) Laser Science Division, the Institute of Electronic Engineers (IEEE) Photonics Society and the Optical Society (OSA), CLEO: 2011 provides the full range of critical developments in the field, showcasing the most significant milestones from laboratory to marketplace. With an unparalleled breadth and depth of coverage, CLEO: 2011 connects all of the critical vertical markets in lasers and electro-optics. For more information, visit the conference's website at www.cleoconference.org.