Numerical Technique for Study of Noise Grating Dynamics in Holographic Photopolymers.

Polymers (Basel)

Electrical Computer and Energy Engineering Department and Materials Science and Engineering Program, UCB 425, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.

Published: November 2020

Although the angular distribution of noise gratings in holographic photopolymer is understood to arise from Bragg matching, the details of scatter strength and dynamics are not fully understood. This confounds development of materials and recording techniques that minimize haze. Here, the kinetics are studied using a multi-physics numerical approach coupling diffraction of light from the dynamic material including scatter centers, reactions of chemical species initiated by this light, diffusion and swelling of these constituents, and the formation of the refractive index from the resulting composition. The approach is validated in the case of two-beam transmission holography by comparison to traditional harmonic series and rigorous coupled-mode approaches. Two beam holography in the presence of scatter is then used to study haze development. This reveals that haze due to weak noise gratings grows significantly above initial scatter only in reaction-limited materials, consistent with proposed Bragg-matched amplification mechanisms. Amplified haze is found to be proportional to initial scatter, quantifying the impact of clean sample fabrication. Conversely, haze is found to grow super-linearly with sample thickness, illustrating the significant challenge for applications requiring low haze in large thickness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7699332PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12112744DOI Listing

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