IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display

This work presents recent advances in the development of infra-red sensitive photorefractive polymers, and updateable near real-time holographic 3D displays based on photorefractive polymers. Theoretical and experimental techniques used for design, fabrication and characterization of photorefractive...

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Main Author: Tay, Savas
Other Authors: Peyghambarian, Nasser
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2007
Subjects:
3D
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194934
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/194934
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1949342016-02-17T03:00:40Z IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display Tay, Savas Peyghambarian, Nasser Peyghambarian, Nasser Pau, Stanley Norwood, Robert A. photorefractive polymer two-photon absorption holographic display 3D stereography holography This work presents recent advances in the development of infra-red sensitive photorefractive polymers, and updateable near real-time holographic 3D displays based on photorefractive polymers. Theoretical and experimental techniques used for design, fabrication and characterization of photorefractive polymers are outlined. Materials development and technical advances that made possible the use of photorefractive polymers for infra-red free-space optical communications, and 3D holographic displays are presented.Photorefractive polymers are dynamic holographic materials that allow recording of highly efficient reversible holograms. The longest operation wavelength for a photorefractive polymer before this study has been 950nm, far shorter than 1550nm, the wavelength of choice for optical communications and medical imaging. The polymers shown here were sensitized using two-photon absorption, a third order nonlinear effect, beyond the linear absorption spectrum of organic dyes, and reach 40% diffraction efficiency with a 35ms response time at this wavelength. As a consequence of two-photon absorption sensitization they exhibit non-destructive readout, which is an important advantage for applications that require high signal-to-noise ratios.Holographic 3D displays provide highly realistic images without the need for special eyewear, making them valuable tools for applications that require "situational awareness" such as medical, industrial and military imaging. Current commercially available holographic 3D displays employ photopolymers that lack image updating capability, resulting in their restricted use and high cost per 3D image. The holographic 3D display shown here employs photorefractive polymers with nearly 100% diffraction efficiency and fast writing time, hours of image persistence, rapid erasure and large area, a combination of properties that has not been shown before. The 3D display is based on stereography and utilizes world's largest photorefractive devices (4x4 inch in size). It can be recorded within a few minutes, viewed for several hours without the need for refreshing and can be completely erased and updated with new images when desired, thusly comprising the first updateable holographic 3D display with memory, suitable for practical use. 2007 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194934 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/194934 659748327 2421 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic photorefractive polymer
two-photon absorption
holographic display
3D
stereography
holography
spellingShingle photorefractive polymer
two-photon absorption
holographic display
3D
stereography
holography
Tay, Savas
IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display
description This work presents recent advances in the development of infra-red sensitive photorefractive polymers, and updateable near real-time holographic 3D displays based on photorefractive polymers. Theoretical and experimental techniques used for design, fabrication and characterization of photorefractive polymers are outlined. Materials development and technical advances that made possible the use of photorefractive polymers for infra-red free-space optical communications, and 3D holographic displays are presented.Photorefractive polymers are dynamic holographic materials that allow recording of highly efficient reversible holograms. The longest operation wavelength for a photorefractive polymer before this study has been 950nm, far shorter than 1550nm, the wavelength of choice for optical communications and medical imaging. The polymers shown here were sensitized using two-photon absorption, a third order nonlinear effect, beyond the linear absorption spectrum of organic dyes, and reach 40% diffraction efficiency with a 35ms response time at this wavelength. As a consequence of two-photon absorption sensitization they exhibit non-destructive readout, which is an important advantage for applications that require high signal-to-noise ratios.Holographic 3D displays provide highly realistic images without the need for special eyewear, making them valuable tools for applications that require "situational awareness" such as medical, industrial and military imaging. Current commercially available holographic 3D displays employ photopolymers that lack image updating capability, resulting in their restricted use and high cost per 3D image. The holographic 3D display shown here employs photorefractive polymers with nearly 100% diffraction efficiency and fast writing time, hours of image persistence, rapid erasure and large area, a combination of properties that has not been shown before. The 3D display is based on stereography and utilizes world's largest photorefractive devices (4x4 inch in size). It can be recorded within a few minutes, viewed for several hours without the need for refreshing and can be completely erased and updated with new images when desired, thusly comprising the first updateable holographic 3D display with memory, suitable for practical use.
author2 Peyghambarian, Nasser
author_facet Peyghambarian, Nasser
Tay, Savas
author Tay, Savas
author_sort Tay, Savas
title IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display
title_short IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display
title_full IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display
title_fullStr IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display
title_full_unstemmed IR Sensitive Photorefractive Polymers, The First Updateable Holographic 3D Display
title_sort ir sensitive photorefractive polymers, the first updateable holographic 3d display
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194934
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/194934
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