Publications by authors named "Ziv Glasser"

Optoelectronic chromatic dispersion (OED) is a significant source of effective chromatic dispersion in photodiodes. We present an experimental and theoretical study of OED in PN-type Si photodiodes and photovoltaic cells and report on a very large effective chromatic dispersion in these devices. As measured with the modulation phase-shift technique at a frequency of 4 kHz for these slow devices, the OED spectral sensitivity for a commercial Si photodiode is approx.

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We demonstrate diagnosis of several machine-condition failures using wide-frequency-band interrogation of fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensors. In collaboration with Israel's national water company Mekorot Ltd., a scaled-down version of a semi-submerged pumping system was constructed.

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Optoelectronic chromatic dispersion (OED) of a PN-type germanium photodiode is used for spectral sensing of ethanol concentration in water. A concentration sensitivity of 70 ppm is achieved. Spectral sensors based on OED in PN-type photodiodes can serve as low-cost on-chip devices for optical spectroscopy.

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The spectral sensitivity of photodiode-based optoelectronic chromatic dispersion is enhanced by phase-shift amplification using RF interferometry. With phase-shift amplification of =4⋅10, a peak phase-shift sensitivity of Δθ = 27 deg/pm is achieved, corresponding to a spectral resolution of Δλ = 1 fm. This all-electronic solid-state technology can serve as an on-chip inexpensive technique for femtometer-resolved wavelength monitoring.

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Optoelectronic chromatic dispersion (OED) has recently been shown to be a significant source of chromatic dispersion in photodiodes. We characterize the OED in a commercial germanium PN-type photodiode and determine the optimum conditions for maximum OED sensitivity and wavelength monitoring. A peak OED sensitivity of 1 deg/nm is measured in a spectral range of 1550-1558 nm with 4 MHz modulation.

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The optoelectronic process of light absorption and current formation in photodiodes is shown to be a significant source of optoelectronic chromatic dispersion (OED). Simple design rules are developed for fabricating a photodiode-based dispersion device that possesses large, small, zero, and either positive or negative OED. The OED parameter is proportional to a spectrally-dependent absorption term αdα/dλ .

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We describe a new technique for incoherent optical frequency domain spectroscopy (I-OFDS) that does not require measurements of the RF phase spectrum in order to reconstruct the optical spectrum. It is based on the addition of either an optical or electronic reference line to the I-OFDS system. Compared to the spectrum acquired by a regular I-OFDS system, high accuracy (error<1%) is predicted and achieved.

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A simple, affordable method for imaging through biological tissue is investigated. The method consists of (1) imaging with a wavelength that has a relatively small scattering coefficient (1310 nm in this case) and (2) collimated illumination together with (3) focal plane detection to enhance the detection of the ballistic photons relative to the diffusive light. We demonstrate ballistic detection of an object immersed in a 1-cm-thick cuvette filled with 4% Intralipid, which is equivalent to ∼1 to 2 cm of skin tissue.

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The dependence of the transition between the ballistic and the diffusive regimes of turbid media on the experimental solid angle of the detection system is analyzed theoretically and experimentally. A simple model is developed which shows the significance of experimental conditions on the location of the ballistic-diffusive transition. It is demonstrated that decreasing the solid angle expands the ballistic regime; however, this benefit is bounded by the initial Gaussian beam diffraction.

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By varying the absorption coefficient and width of an intralipid-India ink solution in a quasi-one-dimensional experiment, we investigate the transition between the ballistic and the diffusive regimes. The medium's attenuation coefficient changes abruptly between two different values within a single mean free path. This problem is analyzed both experimentally and theoretically, and it is demonstrated that the transition location depends on the scattering coefficient as well as on the measuring solid angle.

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