Abstract
There has been recent growing interest in liquid optical components for a range of applications, including lenses, optical sensing, and microfluidic lasers and optical switches [1]. The shape of such components can be manipulated electrically or hydrostatically to simply tune the optical properties. One notable example is the recent advance in microfluidic optical waveguides, in which a high index core liquid flows through a second, lower index cladding fluid [2].
© 2007 IEEE
PDF ArticleMore Like This
Latha Nataraj, Fan Xu, Mark Bundy, and Sylvain G. Cloutier
JTh2A.15 Advances in Optical Materials (AIOM) 2012
Darwin Palima, Andrew Rafael Bañas, Gaszton Vizsnyiczai, Lóránd Kelemen, Thomas Aabo, Pál Ormos, and Jesper Glückstad
TM4D.6 Optical Trapping Applications (OMA) 2013
N.V. Tabiryan, U. Hrozhyk, and S.V. Serak
DTuD5 Diffractive Optics and Micro-Optics (DOMO) 2004