Now, in a paper accepted for publication in Nature Photonics, and
posted on the journal�s Web site, Braun and his team demonstrate
actual optical activity in waveguides and cavities created in their
colloidal crystals.
�Taking our earlier work as a starting point, we built upon recent
advances in theory and computation, improvements in materials growth
techniques, and better colloidal crystallization capabilities to
produce this new photonic material,� said Braun, who also is
affiliated with the university�s Beckman Institute, Frederick Seitz
Materials Research Laboratory, and Micro and Nanotechnology
Laboratory.
To make their optically active devices, the researchers begin by
assembling a colloidal crystal of uniform silica spheres that are 900
nanometers in diameter. After removing the solvent, the researchers
fill the spaces between the spheres with a photoactive monomer. Then
they shine laser light through a microscope and into the crystal,
polymerizing the monomer at the desired locations.
Next, they remove the unpolymerized liquid, and then fill the
structure with silicon. Finally, they etch away the silica spheres,
leaving the desired optical features embedded in a three-dimensional
photonic crystal.
�Using spheres 900 nanometers in diameter creates a band gap at 1.5
microns, which is the wavelength used by the telecommunications
industry for transmissions through fiber-optical cables,� Braun said.
�Creating these waveguides by coupling colloidal assembly and
multi-photon polymerization is simpler and less expensive than
conventional fabrication techniques, especially for large-area
photonic crystals.�
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