Paper
1 September 1991 Recent advances in surface plasmon spatial light modulators
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Abstract
This paper describes recent progress in the development of a new class of spatial light modulator (SLM). These new SLMs modulate light by the interaction of some active material with a high intensity evanescent field generated by surface plasmon resonance. Such devices have the potential for substantial advantages over conventional SLMs, including higher speed and better response uniformity, as well as high sensitivity in devices with thin active layers. A new optically addressed plasmon device, based on a thin amorphous silicon/liquid crystal sandwich structure, has been developed and tested. The performance characteristics compare favorably with those of conventional liquid crystal SLMs in terms of resolution and speed. The design of more advanced devices based on higher performance ferro-electric and electroclinic liquid crystals is now in progress; in particular, the special pseudo-plasmon modes found in highly birefringent materials, and the application of these to modulation, have been analyzed. Surface plasmon SLMs using electro-optic effects in semiconductor active layers are also discussed.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Martin E. Caldwell and Eric M. Yeatman "Recent advances in surface plasmon spatial light modulators", Proc. SPIE 1505, Optics for Computers: Architectures and Technologies, (1 September 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.47011
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KEYWORDS
Spatial light modulators

Plasmons

Liquid crystals

Modulation

Surface plasmons

Prisms

Silicon

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