Photonic crystal microcavity source-based chemical sensor
An ultra-small photonic crystal (PC) optical microcavity to detect small changes in concentration of chemical analytes in solutions is demonstrated. The high electric field concentration in small moda...
Soft opal films with tunable structural color and their applications
A new class of colloidal crystals, whose structural color can be tuned by changing lattice constants, was fabricated. They were composed of polystyrene (PS) submicron particles embedded in a silicone ...
Synthetic approaches toward tungsten photonic crystals for thermal emission
Proc. SPIE, Vol. 6005, 600505 (2005);
doi:10.1117/12.631111
Online Publication Date: 10 November 2005
Conference Date: Monday 24 October 2005
Conference Location: Boston, MA, USA
Conference Title: Photonic Crystals and Photonic Crystal Fibers for Sensing Applications
Conference Chairs: Henry H. Du
Theefficiency of standard incandescent light sources is limited by strongthermal emission in the infrared regime. It is possible thatemission of light may be more efficient when the conventionaltungsten filament is replaced by metallic photonic crystals that havelarge photonic band gaps in the infrared and can suppressthe thermal emission of blackbody emitters. One approach toward fabricatingphotonic crystal structures with highly ordered periodic features on anoptical length scale involves colloidal crystal templating to produce inverseopals. Metallic inverse opals were synthesized using chemical vapor deposition(CVD) and wet chemical methods capable of producing granules, thinfilms and monolithic pieces. Thin films were prepared by infiltratingsilica opal films with tungsten hexacarbonyl in a CVD process,reducing tungsten in hydrogen and removing the silica template byHF etching. A range of soluble metal precursors, including tungsten(VI)chloride, tungsten(V) ethoxide and acetylated peroxotungstic acid, were infiltrated intoself-assembled, colloidal crystal arrays comprised of monodisperse poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA)spheres. The infiltrated composites were processed under reducing conditions toproduce metallic inverse replicas of the template. The influence ofprocessing conditions on structural properties, including thickness of skeletal walls,window openings and solid filling fraction, was studied. A monolithictungsten inverse opal with dimensions of 0.5 × 0.5 ×0.2 cm was resistively heated in an inert atmosphere andthermal emission was observed. The wet chemical methods provide alow cost alternative to expensive nanolithographic methods for the fabricationof three-dimensional periodic metallic structures.