An improvement of the crystal quality of opal films self‐assembled from polymer spheres in a moving meniscus using the agitation by white noise acoustic vibrations is demonstrated. A tenfold higher ordering of a hexagonal sphere packing in the (111) plane is achieved. This crystallization method, the mechanism of which is described in terms of the stochastic resonance, is a contrast to the widely used approach based on maintaining equilibrium conditions during the crystallization process. The precise quantification of the incremental lattice order improvement as a function of acoustic noise intensity is achieved by calculating the probability of finding an opposite partner for each sphere in the lattice. This method is examined against conventional and established techniques such as Fourier transforms and translational and bond‐orientational correlation functions, and its advantages are demonstrated. Rotational symmetry analysis of diffraction resonances in measured and calculated optical transmission spectra as a function of the azimuth lattice orientation are carried out to confirm that the surface ordering translates into the bulk ordering of high index crystal planes, which are most sensitive to disorder.
We propose and develop a comprehensive model for estimating the refractive index (RI) response over three potential sensing zones in a multimode fiber. The model has been developed based on a combined ray optics, Gaussian beam, and wave optics analysis coupled to the consideration of the injected interrogating lightwave characteristics and validated experimentally through the realization of three sensors with different lengths of stripped cladding sections as the sensing region. The experimental results highly corroborate and validate the simulation output from the model for the three RI sensing zones. The sensors can be employed over a very wide dynamic RI range from 1.316 to over 1.608 at a wavelength of 1550 nm, with the best resolution of 2.2447 × 10−5 RI unit (RIU) obtained in Zone II for a 1-cm sensor length.
This is the accepted version of the paper.This version of the publication may differ from the final published version. Abstract-An innovative signal processing method based on custom-made wavelet transform (WT) is presented for robust detection of fringes contained in the interferometric signal of Self-Mixing (SM) laser diode sensors. It enables the measurement of arbitrarily-shaped vibrations even in the corruptive presence of speckle. Our algorithm is based on the pattern recognition capability of bespoke WTs for detecting SM fringes. Once the fringes have been correctly detected, phase unwrapping methods can be applied to retrieve the complete instantaneous phase of the SM signals. Here, the novelty consists in using two distinct mother wavelets Ψr(t) and Ψ d (t) specifically designed to distinguish SM patterns as well as the displacement direction. The peaks, i.e. maxima modulus of WT, then allow the detection of the fringes.
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