Paper
25 February 2010 Femtosecond laser written embedded diffractive optical elements and their applications
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Abstract
Femtosecond laser direct writing (FLDW) has been widely employed to create volumetric structures in transparent materials that are applicable as various photonic devices such as active and passive waveguides, couplers, gratings, and diffractive optical elements (DOEs). The advantages of fabrication of volumetric DOEs using FLDW include not only the ability to produce embedded 3D structures but also a simple fabrication scheme, ease of customization, and a clean process. DOE fabrication techniques using FLDW are presented as well as the characterization of laserwritten DOEs by various methods such as diffraction efficiency measurement. Fresnel zone plates were fabricated in oxide glasses using various femtosecond laser systems in high and low repetition rate regimes. The diffraction efficiency as functions of fabrication parameters was measured to investigate the dependence on the different fabrication parameters such as repetition rate and laser dose. Furthermore, several integration schemes of DOE with other photonic structures are demonstrated for compact photonic device fabrication.
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Jiyeon Choi, Mark Ramme, Troy Anderson, and Martin C. Richardson "Femtosecond laser written embedded diffractive optical elements and their applications", Proc. SPIE 7589, Frontiers in Ultrafast Optics: Biomedical, Scientific, and Industrial Applications X, 75891A (25 February 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.843697
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Cited by 7 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Diffraction

Waveguides

Femtosecond phenomena

Diffractive optical elements

Wave propagation

Custom fabrication

Photonics

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