| Literature DB >> 31060331 |
Yuhang Wan1, Mengxuan Cheng2, Zheng Zheng3,4,5, Kai Liu6,7.
Abstract
A polarization-modulation-based Goos-Hanchen (GH) sensing scheme leveraging the polarization-dependence of the Bloch surface wave enhanced GH shift is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. Based on a simple setup utilizing a liquid crystal modulator to switch the polarization state of the input beam periodically, the alternating positions of the reflected beam for both polarizations are monitored by a lock-in amplifier to handily retrieve the GH shift signal. The conventional direct measurement of the beam position for the target state of polarization is vulnerable to instabilities in the optomechanical setup and alignment. Our proposed scheme provides a sensitive yet robust GH shift-sensing setup where the common mode drift and noise could be suppressed to ensure better system stability.Entities:
Keywords: optical instruments; optics at surfaces; refractive index sensors; surface waves
Year: 2019 PMID: 31060331 PMCID: PMC6539583 DOI: 10.3390/s19092088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the proposed scheme.
Figure 2(a) Schematic of the BSW enhanced GH shift sensor and the normalized electric field distribution of the excited BSW; (b) simulated band structure of an ideally infinite 1D PC structure for P-polarization and the BSW mode excited (red circle). The light blue region is the allowed band and the white region is the band-gap. Dash line is the light line for water (n = 1.33).
Figure 3(a) Simulated angular reflectance and phase response when the external medium is water for P-polarized input. (b) Measured angular reflectance when the external medium is water for P-polarized and S-polarized input.
Figure 4Polarization modulated position-sensitive detector (PSD) readout and synchronized trigger.
Figure 5The measured Goos–Hanchen (GH) shift readout from the lock-in amplifier with the Bloch surface wave (BSW) excitation for water cladding (dark dash line: The working angle).
Figure 6Real-time record of the lock-in signal with different samples.