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The soi-gei process is based on the mixing of liquid reactants on a molecular scale and the
subsequent solidification of the solution into a porous amorphous oxide gel. The porous gel is then heated
to give glasses or poiycrystailine solids. Additives can be made to the liquid mixture to give composites.
Many new optical materials have been prepared by the sol-gel technique in the past five years. The present
status of the scientific understanding of the process is summarized and examples presented of different
types of materials successfully developed for optical applications. The enormous potentials of the process
are not fully exploited at present. Sol-gei optics promises to be a growing field of science and technology.
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The development of chemical processing methods for the fabrication of glass and ceramic shapes for photonic
applications is frequently Edisonian in nature. In part, this is because the numerous variables that must be optimized to
obtain a given material with a specific shape and particular properties cannot be readily defined based on fundamental
principles. In part, the problems arise because the basic chemistry of common chemical processing systems has not been
fully delineated. The prupose of this paper is to provide an overview of the basic chemical problems associated with
chemical processing. The emphasis will be on sol-gel processing, a major subset pf chemical processing. Two alternate
approaches to chemical processing of glasses are also briefly discussed. One approach concerns the use of bimetallic
alkoxide oligomers and polymers as potential precursors to mulimetallic glasses. The second approach describes the utility
of metal carboxylate precursors to multimetallic glasses.
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The sol-gel technique allows preparation of pure inorganic glasses or composite
glasses of inorganic and organic nature at low temperature. Incorporation of organic
molecules with desired spectral characteristics is the subject of our research.
Specific cases include preparation of stable tunable lasers in the visible based on
photostable dyes; glasses doped with dyes characterized by double-proton transfer
with good separation between absorption and emission; new materials having nonlinear
properties; and glasses with dyes sensitive to ambient acidity and basicity. Four
types of these glasses are discussed.
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Transition metal oxide (T.M.O) gels exhibit extrinsic or specific optical properties. This duality is
related to the fact that they can be used as transparent amorphous matrices from which high refractive
index is expected, or for their mixed valence behaviour. Titanium or Zirconium oxide based gels have
been used as transparent matrices in which large concentration of inorganic (Eu (III)) or organic
luminophores (Rhodamine 6G , Rhodamine 640, Coumarine 4) have been incorporated. Several
specific optical properties related to Titanium oxide based gels such as electrochromism
photoelectrochemistry and photochemistry are also described.
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Cylindrical monolithic silica dry gel bodies, up to 250 grams in weight, are
routinely produced from alkoxide sols free of colloidal particles, using tetraethylorthosilicate
precursor. These dry gel bodies, after sintering in controlled
chlorinated atmosphere, yielded clear, bubble free, dense glass rods 3.0-4.0 cm in
diameter and 1 5-20 cm in length. Uv-vis--ir spectra, of properly dehydrated and
sintered glass samples tested from 1 80 nm to 3200 urn, showed no detectable
absorption peak at 2700 nm and a UV band edge at around 185 nm; implying that
resultant glasses are reasonably free of impurities and hydroxyl ions.
Effect of sol composition on gel ultrastructure was carefully investigated. It
was found that by careful choice of sol composition, type and amount of catalyst
and aging conditions, it is possible to tailor the gel ultrastructure for ease of
drying. For example, we have been able to produce gels with unimodal pore
distributions, and average pore sizes in the range from 8 to 300 A and surface
area in the range from 150 - 1100 m2/gram. As a result of this ability to tailor
gel ultrastructure, including pore size, bulk density and skeletal density of the gel
bodies, we have been able to optimize gel ultrastructure to maximize its strength,
so that it can withstand capillary forces generated during the drying processes.
The result of this preliminary investigation has led us to believe that high
quality fused silica glass of much larger sizes can be produced by the alkoxide
route; and experiments to scale up the process is under way. Up to date results of
this investigation will be presented at the conference.
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Pregrooved glass disks were prepared by the application of the sol-gel coating technique; the soda-lime-silica glass disks were coated with
polyethylene glycol(PEG)-containing Si02-Ti02 gel films, in which fine
patterns were formed by pressing a stamper. The refractive index of
the pregrooved layer was matched with that of the glass disks by
adjusting the TiO2 content. When the weight ratio of PEG with the
average molecular weight of 600 to SiO2-TiO oxides was unity, the
pitch of the pregrooves formed was unchanged in comparison with that
of the stamper used after the heat-treatment at 350°C, while the land
height and the land width of the pregrooves were respectively reduced
to 6O9 and 85 of those of the stamper after the heat-treatment. The
noise level of the glass disks with the pregrooved SiO2-Ti02 layer was
lower by 1-2 dB than that of the disks with pure 5i02 layer in the
frequency range from 0.5 to 2.0 MHz. The lower noise level of the
former can be ascribed to the agreement in the refractive index between the pregrooved layer and the glass disks.
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The effects of the addition of polyethylene glycol(PEG) on the formation
of gel-derived glass films in the Si02-TiO2 system were studied,
aimed at their application to the optical memory disks. The viscosity
of the as-prepared sols increased almost linearly with increasing PEG
content. The increase in viscosity of the sols during the storage was
retarded with decreasing molecular weight of PEG added and with
increasing amount of PEG added. The viscosity increase of the sols
during the storage, however, showed a similar temperature dependence,
i.e. almost the same apparent activation energy was obtained, in the
sols containing different amounts of PEG. These findings indicate that
PEG added to the SiO2-TiO2 sols scarcely reacts with the hydrolyzed
inorganic species. The hardness of the resultant PEG-containing gel
films greatly decreased with increasing PEG content. The gel films
containing PEG of the smaller average molecular weight showed the
higher hardness and the steeper increase in hardness with increasing
the heat-treatment temperature than those containing PEG of the larger
average molecular weight. For a high performance in the fine patterning process and densification of the resultant patterned films,
PEG of the smaller amount and the smaller molecular weight is favorable, provided the PEG-containing gel films are initially soft enough
to emboss fine patterns by pressing a stamper. Incorporated PEG in the
Si02-Ti02 gel films decomposed completely at temperatures over 300 °C
and had a very slight influence on chemical bondings in the resultant
films.
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This paper addresses the properties of sol-gel silica in relation to its potential to provide new devices for optical imaging.
Although the sol-gel method opens the door to unprecedented levels of purity of silica materials, it is also beset with
problems of the achievement of extreme optical homogeneity. The work reported discusses experiences with sol-gel silica
intra cavity elements in ion lasers and new concepts of imaging and laser structures based on fabrication via porous gel-silica.
A new physical model for etalons is proposed which shows advantages of porous gel-silica over conventional fully dense
materials.
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Since the basic phthalocyanine structure intrinsically possesses high thermal and
oxidative stabilities, phthalocyanines incorporated into sol-gel glasses provide an attractive
approach for realizing highly stable nonlinear optical media. Experimental results recently
obtained for the nonresonant and resonant third order optical properties of
metallophthalocyanines are reviewed in this paper.
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Various methods of obtaining fine colloidal precipitates of cadmium sulfo-selenides
in Si02 gel matrices are described. These materials, which are of interest in opto-
electronic applications, can be prepared by diffusion of various reactants in wet gels.
The influence of different preparative parameters on the diffusion characteristics,
the possibility of obtaining distribution gradients and, in particular, the interest
of sonocatalysis (ultrasonic irradiation) are briefly presented.
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The sol-gel process has been applied successfully to the preparation of small-particle-size ZnS, CdS
or PbS-doped silica glasses with a significant quantum size effect. Gels prepared through the
hydrolysis of complex solutions of Si(0C2H5)4 and acetate of Zn, Cd or Pb were heated at 500 to 900°C,
then reacted with H2S gas to form fine microcrystals doped glasses. From X-ray diffraction analyses
and transmission electron mlcrographs, these crystals were cubic ZnS, hexagonal CdS and cubic PbS
crystal, respectively, and their sizes were 2 to 8 nm in diameter. In the optical absorption spectra, the
absorption edge exhibited a blue shift compared with those of the bulk sulfides crystals. Size
dependence of energy shift was discussed in relation to size quantization of electron-hole in
microcrystals. The nonlinearity was estimated to be 1.5 x i0O esu for 2% CdS doped glass.
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CdS-doped Si02 glasses have been prepared through the sol-gel process. A methanol
solution of cadmium nitrate and thiourea in a molar ratio of 1:2 was added to the
Si02 sol prepared from silicon tetraethoxide. The mixed solution was left for
gelation at 50 °C and thereby complexes of cadmium nitrate with thiourea were
confined in the gel. The gel obtained was then heat-treated at 350 °C in air for
the decomposition of the complexes to CdS, the elimination of residual organics,
and the densification. The above process produced the transparent Si02 glasses
doped with CdS microcrystallites up to Cd/Si = 0.05. The optical absorption edge of
the CdS-doped glasses moved to longer wavelengths from that of non-doped Si02 glasses
with increasing Cd/Si ratio. The size of CdS microcrystallites in the glasses
was further controllable with the additional heat-treatment at around 400°C in a
lO H2S/90% Ar stream. For these CdS microcrystallite-doped glasses, the peak of
photoluminescence was shifted to shorter wavelengths relative to the absorption edge
of CdS crystal, in agreement with the blue shift of the optical absorption edge;
these shifts were indicative of the quantum size effects.
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A gradient-index glass rod of about 13 mm in diameter and 20 mm in length with the
refractive index difference of about 0.05 between center and perimeter has been
prepared by the sol-gel process from a precursor solution consisted of
tetramethoxysilane, tetraethoxysilane, boron ethoxide and aqueous solution of lead
acetate. A bubble free wet gel of about 35 mm in diameter and 50 mm in length was
obtained by adding acetic acid to the precursor solution as a buffering agent. The
liquid in the micropores of the wet gel was totally replaced with acetone. Then the
compositional gradient of lead was formed in radial direction of the gel by soaking
in an ethanolic solution of potassium acetate. A transparent r-GRIN rod of about
13 mm in diameter was obtained by sintering the gel at 550°C.
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Gradient index optics will play an increasingly important role in applications such as fax machines,
photocopiers, fiber optic couplers and cameras. In this paper, we present an overview of various
sol-gel methods for making gradient index materials.
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A new technique for producing radial gradient refractive index (r-GRIN) titanium-doped silica lenses
has been developed employing a sol-gel leaching method. The obtained lenses possess a parabolic index
distribution and give good images with high resolution. They also show high coupling efficiency with
optical fibers and enable a low-loss large distance space transmission of light between optical fibers.
Furthermore the sol-gel r-GRIN lenses show a high degree of environmental stability as expected for the
doped-silica lenses.
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The newly emerging field of Nonlinear Optics and Photonics offers tremendous
opportunities for optical engineers and materials scientists. The approach used for
sol-gel optics i.e. the use of sol-gel processing can play a very important role for
the development of novel materials and device structures for nonlinear optics and
photonics. In this paper, chemical processing using the sol-gel method is reported
for preparation of new composite materials of both a silica glass and a V2O gel with
a ii conjugated polymer poly-p-phenylene vinylene up to 50% by weight. The omposite
films show highly improved optical quality with large third-order nonlinear optical
coefficient, the latter derived from the conjugated polymer. Optical waveguiding
through the film has been achieved. Nonlinear optical studies using femtosecond
degenerate four wave mixing, optical Kerr gate switching and power dependent
waveguide coupling have been successfully performed. Also, to investigate the use of
such films for optical recording, a two dimensional grating structure has
successfully been produced.
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The sol-gel process is a solution synthesis technique which provides a low temperature
chemical route for the preparation of rigid transparent matrix materials. The luminescent
organic dye molecules, rhodamine 6G and coumarin 540A have been incorporated, via the
sol-gel method, into aluminosilicate and organically modified silicate host matrices.
Synthesis, laser oscillation and photostability for these systems are reported. The
improved photostability of these materials with respect to comparable polymeric host
materials is discussed.
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When doped with organic dye laser molecules, porous sol-gel prepared silica
constitutes a solid state dye laser medium. In this study such media have
been shown to exhibit laser action using: (a) a krypton fluoride, 249nm,
laser pump producing nano-second laser pulses and, (b) a coumarin 504
(507nm) pump producing microsecond laser pulses. The lasing thresholds were
measured as 140kW/mm3 and 1.8kW/mm3 respectively, with lifetimes of 10-20
and 50-100 shots respectively.
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Chemical conditions for thorium phosphate gel preparation have been determined. The transparency is of good optical
quality and the gel is very stable for a long time. Under drying condition, this gel can give rise to the xerogel which is still
transparent. We can also prepare this xerogel by simple evaporation at room temperature of a very concentrated solution of
thorium phosphate. From this viscous medium, the xerogel can be obtained in various kinds of shapes : threads, slabs and
blocks. Solidification time depends on the final volume desired and spreads from few minutes to several weeks. Absorption
spectrum of pure gel and xerogel have been recorded. Gel and xerogel doped with very well known probes like Nd3 and Er3+
were examined to compare their optical properties with aqueous medium of the same chemical composition. Eu3+ doped gel
and xerogel were also studied using their fluorescence properties.
The optical properties of Cr3 in doped gel and xerogel allowed us to determine the kinetics of hydration sphere
modification during the drying period. Finally, as xerogel synthesis takes place at room temperature, fragile organic dye can
be used as dopant, so Rhodamine 60 absorption and emission spectra have been studied in these conditions.When, at that
time, the xerogel is doped with Coumarin 460 and Th3+,an energy transfer is observed between dye and Th3+ ions, which
contributes to enhance the fluorescence of Th3+ ions. Eu3+ behaves similarly. In conclusion, gel and xerogel of thorium phosphate tested with usual probes such as 3d, 4f ions and dyes seem to be
very promissing matrices.
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The sol-gel method has been identified as a very promising direction to prepare host matrices for trapping
photoactive species. A wide variety of such activator are sensitive to environmental parameters and have been used both
for sot-gel processing investigation and photoactive materials preparation. Depending on the organic or inorganic nature
of the fluorescence probe, different fluorescence effects have to be expected in metal oxide matrix derived from a sol-gel
process. Special attention has been given to the interaction between three fluorescent species (Eu3+ , Nd3+, pyrene) and
three inorganic matrices (silica, titania, zirconia). Fluorescence phenomena have been investigated related to the nature
of the probe and its incorporation mode into the host matrix.
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Previous studies have shown that sol-gel matrices are excellent low temperature hosts for
various optically-active materials, both organic and inorganic. Optical properties of these
composites depend upon such factors as the structure of the matrix and size, shape, and degree
of dispersion of the optically-active phase. We discuss factors that control the shrinkage and
clarity of silicate aerogel host matrices and report on novel composites in which the optical
properties are controlled by solid-vapor and/or solid-liquid reactions within the host matrix.
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Sol-gel processing is used to make two new types of silica optics, Type V fully dense silica and Type VI
optically transparent ultraporous silica. Type VI silica is an ideal matrix for impregnation with second
phases that are optically active, resulting in a hybrid optical material with a unique combination of
properties. The processing and characteristics of several hybrid optical devices are discussed including
hybrid dye lasers, scintillators and wavelength shifters, transpiration cooled windows, and laser written
waveguides. Advantages of the hybrid optical components are discussed along with potential applications.
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Shaped microporous silica has been prepared by a sol-gel process. The resulting silicas have 50% open porosity. The open porosity is filled by immersing the
shapes in methyl methacrylate (MMA) and polymerizing with ultraviolet radiation.
The fully impregnated silica is recovered in net shape.
The outstanding feature of the PMMA-impregnated silica is its transparency.
There is little loss from scattering because of the nanometer scale of the micro-structure and the similarity in index of refraction for silica and PMMA. The
flexure strength of the sillca-PMMA composite has been measured in iL-point bending.
The strength increases at slower strain pates because the PMMA provides crack blunting.
The composites can withstand thermal shocks up to about 150°C without losing
strength. The thermal expansion coefficient for the range 0 to 150°C follows a
mixing rule for 50% silica - 50% PMMA. While the mechanical behavior of the composite
largely follows that of bulk PMMA, the microhardness is 3 to 5 times greater
than for bulk PMMA.
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Organically modified ceramics (ORMOCERs) have been prepared with
respect to optical applications. The investigations show that materials
can be synthesized with interesting properties for a variety
of potential applications. They can be used as hard coatings for the
protection of optical polymers, e.g. CR 39 or fluorescent dye contaming
PNMA. The incorporation of dyes leads to active optical matrices,
e.g. fluorescent coatings and the introduction of components
with high refractive increments to refractive index numbers n
1.68. For microoptic applications, materials suitable for photolithographic
patterning or direct laser writing have been developed.
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The synthesis of zirconia modified polymerized methacryloxypropylsilane
as a new material with a potential for optical application has
been investigated. The material is synthesized by copolymerizing 3-methacryloxypropyl
trimethoxysilane and zirconium propylate chelated by
methacrylic acid. The methacrylic acid serves as a complexing agent and
participates in the polymerization process in order to incorporate the
zirconia homogeneously into the polymer. Transparent bulk materials
have been prepared by this process.
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Molecular dispersions of amorphous siliceous materials doped with organic molecules, TPPS, were prepared
by a sol-gel process in which Si(0C2H5)4 was hydrolyzed in neutral solution. An amorphous silica which was
doped with TPPS on the order of 1x105 mol/mol Si02 showed photochemical hole burning at 4 K. The
TPPS/a-Si02 was heat-treated at various temperatures and the change of optical spectrum were observed as
a function of temperature. It was found that the sample was comparatively stable upto 200 °C.
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Sol-gel methods offer a number of notable advantages for the
synthesis of optical films and coatings. Areas of potential or
actual application of this technology range from single layer and
multilayer antireflection coatings to embossed planar waveguides
and organic-modified oxide materials. The most notable advantages
of these wet chemical nethods will be surveyed, as will progress
achieved to date in a number of the most attractive representative
areas. The technical bases for the success/failure in each case
will be considered. Also to be discussed will be the prospects - in both the near-term and long-term - of future developments in the
sol-gel synthesis of optical films, as well as the principal
technical hurdles which must be overcome in order that such
synthesis methods may achieve more widespread use in the future.
Finally, a comparison will be made between the microstructures and
characteristics of films and coatings deposited using sol-gel
methods with those deposited from the vapor phase. In all cases,
use will be made of recent advances in our laboratory in the
subject area.
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Process parameters introduce a wide range of property and behavior variations in
inorganic coatings deposited from metal-organic derived solutions. The modifications occur in
the molecular, morphological, and the stoichiometric states and present some unique design
opportunities for applications in the optical and electronic fields. The nature of the modifications
and the processing parameters that introduce the modifications are discussed for the
metal-organic derived oxide coatings.
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Pursuing our official collaborative ICF-laser search and development program at Limeil National
Laboratory (LNL) with the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) for high damage threshold
optical coatings, we have now formally established that Sol-Gel highly reflective coatings prepared from
colloids are superior to those prepared from solutions of precursor materials. Thus, single layer coatings of
bohemite A1203.H20 have been prepared on fused silica and BK-7 substrates from aqueous colloidal
suspensions of hydrated alumina at room temperature. Such coatings were porous and therefore revealed a
measured refractive index of about 1.44, lower than the relevant dense material. These single coats when
laser damage tested, have exhibited thresholds, under S-on-i irradiation mode (S shots at the same fluence
onto a selected site) of respectively i2-i4 J/cm2 with 3-ns pulses and 35-50 i/cm2 with-i6 ns pulses at 30-Hz.
Multilayer, high reflectivity, dielectric coatings were also prepared at room temperature by laying down
quarterwave-thick, alternating coats of this alumina with silica also prepared from colloidal sol, and having
a refractive index of 1.22. To achieve 99% reflectivity 32 to 36 total layers were required. Such HR-coatings
revealed damage thresholds as good as those of single layers of the constituting oxides in the same laser
conditions.
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Sol-gel derived silica, siica-titania, and tantala coatings were covered with a thin metal film and
translated across a Nd:YAG laser beam (1.06 jim). The laser energy was absorbed by the metal film, which
heated the underlying sol-gel coating. This heating densified the sol-gel coatings, thereby increasing the
index ofrefraction of the laser heated region, and forming channel waveguide structures in all three systems.
The channels formed by this technique were etched, to remove the undensified regions, which resulted
in ridged waveguide structures. The structures were also produced by depositing a metal pattern using
photolithographic techniques, and rastering the laser across the entire sample. The refractive indicies of
laser densifled and furnace densified silica coatings were similar. Large differences were observed in the
indicies oflaser and furnace densified coatings for the siica-titania and tantala systems.
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A series of silica gel films were spin-coated on single crystal silicon
(c-Si) substrates and their structure was characterized by vibrational spectroscopy.
The films were either dried at room temperature or partially densified
at 450 0C. Fourier transform infrared absorption spectra have been obtained
for each film and they are compared to the spectrum of thermal SiO2
films. The gel films (ca. 150 nm thick) show the presence of residual OH
groups, but very little molecular water or organic species and the fundamental
Si-O-Si vibrations exhibit shifts toward lower frequencies, compared to the
thermal oxide. The Si-O-Si antisymmetric stretch near 1070 cm was narrower
for the gels and the shoulder on the high frequency side was stronger. The nature
of this feature is discussed based also on oblique incidence transmission
and reflection-absorption spectra taken with polarized infrared light.
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Spin-on deposited SiO-TiO2 thin films (pure and doped with dyes) are produced. Their optical and mechanical
properties are determined and their use for a number of applications is investigated. The spin-on deposited SiOi film has
been succesfully doped with coumarin as a colour center and characterized as a waveguide overlay.
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Amorphous tungsten oxide layers are deposited via the sol-gel route. Aqueous solutions of
tungstate salts (Na2WO4) or chioroalkoxides (WOC12(OPr')2) provide cheap and suitable
precursors for the synthesis of W03, nH2O colloidal solutions. Layers of large area can be
deposited by spray or dip-coating. They exhibit electrochromic properties and could be used for
making display devices or smart windows. Their elecirochromic properties depend on the structure
of the oxide network and the amount of water of the W03, nH2O layers. Switching time and
stability decrease when n increases due to faster ion diffusion. Optical absorption arising from
electron delocalization varies with the crystalline structure of the oxide network. Both the structure
and the hydration state of the layers depend on the experimental procedure. It is therefore possible
to optimize the electrochromic properties of sol-gel derived layers.
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The production of thin films whose refractive index is measurand specific, for use in an
interferometric fiber optic chemical sensor, is discussed. The problem of making such coatings has
been tackled by a system we have termed the "guest-host" approach, in which an active liquid
whose index varies with measurand, is contained within a porous glass host of fixed index.
Suitable porous silica-titania glass films have been produced via the sol-gel process. The use of this
system enables the index of the glass to be varied, so that the composite index of the liquid filled
film can be tailored to that required by the optical system. The sol-gel method developed is based
upon the hydrolysis and polymerisation of metal alkoxides, in an acidic aqueous/alcoholic solution.
Thin film slab waveguides were deposited in order to measure the light scattering losses, which
were found to be typically ''1dB/cm. The porosity of films was studied using a new technique
developed in which water adsorption isotherms are plotted using ellipsometry. The pore size was
found to be very small of pore diameter in the nanometer range, and the total porosity -1O%. Both
of these factors were increased by the removal of residual organic material, using hydrogen
peroxide. Finally the use of pH indicator dyes as a liquid fill is discussed, to produce a pH sensor.
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Vanadium dioxide thin films have been grown from vanadium tetrakis
(t-butoxide) by the sol-gel process. A new method for the synthesis of
the vanadium precursor was also developed. Films were deposited by
dipcoating glass slides from an isopropanol solution, followed by postdeposition
annealing of the films at 600°C under nitrogen. The
properties of these films, to a high degree, were a function of
crystalline boundaries and crystalline grain size. These gel-derived
V02 films undergo a reversible semiconductor-to-metal phase transition
near 72°C, exhibiting characteristic resistive and spectral switching
comparable with near stoichiometric V02 films prepared on non-
crystalline substrates by other techniques. Paralleling the
investigation of pure V02, films were doped with hexavalent transition
metal oxides to demonstrate lowering of the transition of the transition
temperature.
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Sol-gel cerium - titanium oxide layers present potential application as transparent
counter-electrode (ion storage layer) in electrochromic windows and mirrors
using lithium conducting electrolyte and W03 electrochromic coating. The precursor
sol, prepared by mixing Ti(OPri)4 and Ce(N03)6 (NH4)2 in ethanol, is initially dark
red and becomes transparent after a few days aging indicating the presence of Ce3
complexes. The layers have been obtained by dip coating technique and heat treated
at 4509C during 15 minutes.They have been characterized by XRD, SIMS, optical absorption
and electrochemical techniques; it is shown that the electrochemical reaction
corresponds to a reversible insertion-extraction oflithium ions within a Ti02
amorphous film containing small Ce02 crystallites. At low sweep frequencies the
process is controlled by a diffusion mechanism (DLi ≊ 6.4 lOl2cm2/s at 259C). Characterizations
of an all solid state electrochromic window/glass/JTO/ W03/ POE-Li N
(502 CF3)2 1 Ti02 - Ce02 I ITO I glass I are also presented.
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Single and multilayer sol-gel thin films of Ti02-PbO, Ti02-Bi203 and Ti02-CeO2
composition were deposited on glasses using the dip coating technique. The precursors
included Ti(OPri)4 chemically modified by acetyl acetone and diluted in PriOH and
sols of Pb(OAc)2, Bi(NO3)3 5H20 diluted in acetic acid. The Ti02-Ce02 sol was prepared by mixing Ce NH2 (NO3 )6 in ethanol and then adding Ti (O-iso-C3H7 )4. Structure
texture and homogeneity of their main constituants was established by XRD, XPS,SIMS
and SEM-EDX techniques as a function of heat treatments.
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The sol-gel method using lithium and boron-n-tributoxide as starting materials has
been applied to prepare Li2B4O7 coating films on silica glass, silicon and sapphire
single crystal substrates. The effects of the amounts of water and acid added to
coating solutions, and the kinds of substrate on the crystallization of Li2B4O7 coating films were fully investigated. It was found that a sufficient amount of water is
required for obtaining well-crystallized Li2B4O7 films of single phase, the addition
of acids such as hydrochloric and acetic acids to the coating solution suppresses
crystallization up to 600°C and gives highly oriented Li2B4O7 single phase films on
further heating at 800°C.
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Ferroelectric thin films including undoped and doped PZT (lead zirconate titanate), BaTiO3
(barium titanate), SBN (strontium barium niobate), KNbO3 (potassium niobate), PBN (lead barium
niobate), KNSBN (potassium sodium strontium barium niobate), and LiNbO3 (lithium niobate) were
made on silicon and fused silica substrates by a sol-gel process. A heterojunction effect was observed
in ferroelectric thin films on both n-silicon and p-silicon through measurement of I- V characteristics,
and by the demonstration ofa photocurrent effect. Transparent and preferentially orientated SBN thin
films on fused silica substrates can be obtained by applying a d.c. electric field during heat treatment.
The films have structral and optical anisotropies as well as photorefractive properties. Two-wave
mixing experiment was demonstrated by using these films and a maxmum holographic efficiency of
near 1% was obtained.
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Transparent strontium-barium niobate (SBN) thin films, 0.3-1.0 pm, have been made by the solgel
method. Alkoxide solutions were used as starting materials. Polycrystalline SBN thin films were
grown on fused silica, single crystals silicon, and GaAs substrates after firing at 700°C. Dielectric,
ferroelectric, and pyroelectric properties of SBN films were observed. Absorption spectra of SBN and
SBN doped with 0.3 % Cu ( SBN:Cu) were measured. The photorefractive effect of SBN was
demonstrated by a two-wave mixing experiment.
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Refractive index values are reported for sol-gel derived PbTiO3 thin-layers as a function of thermal
processing conditions. Dense amorphous layers were formed at 350°C (n = 2.35) with crystallization at
450°C (ii = 2.65). A spin-casting method is described for the deposition of coatings. Ellipsometry was
used to monitor optical properties as a function of heat-treatment conditions.
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The sol-gel processing of lithium niobate thin-layers on silicon from heterometallic alkoxide
solutions is described. Advantages of sol-gel processing for low-temperature formation of stoichiometric
lithium niobate are discussed. A recyrstallization procedure, involving a bimetallic alkoxide, was
developed for the purification of alkoxide solutions. The alkoxide complex contained the appropriate cation
ratio for the preparation of stoichiometric lithium niobate. Solvent selection, addition of nitric acid or
ammonium hydroxide, and thermal processing conditions were shown to affect the ceramic
microstructures. In particular, the solvent system and additives influenced grain growth and porosity in the
crystallized layers. Methoxyethanol-derived layers had a grain size approximately twice that observed for
the ethanol system. Use of a rapid heating process produced dense layers at 650°C, whereas oxygen
treatments allowed for crystallization at 400°C.
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Sol-gel processing methods were investigated for the preparation of lithium niobate optical layers. Two
alkoxide systems, ethanol and 2-methoxyethanol, were studied. The methods resulted in either randomly
oriented polycrystalline layers on silicon or grain-oriented layers on sapphire and platinum substrates.
Data are reported for the electrical and optical properties of the layers. In addition to stoichiometric lithium
niobate layers, Ti:LiNbO was prepared by the addition of titanium alkoxides to the solutions. Optical data
are presented for the Ti:LiNbO3 layers as a function of titanium content.
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The results of studies into the interaction between sol-gel prepared silica
and 1O.6μm wavelength laser radiation are presented. Hardening of the
silica has been measured up to the value for fused silica. The lower
densification and upper damage (bloating) thresholds were measured as 4.3 ± 0.2 and 6.3 ± 0.3 J cm -2 of surface irradiated. A reflectivity
refractometer has been developed to measure the refractive index of sol-gel
surfaces and inconsistencies in the surface were detected resulting in
variations in point-to-point measurements.
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A new laser method is reported for manufacturing of microoptical components including high-aperture
microlenses and microobjectives which can be used in fiber-optic communication links, in integrated optic
devices, in the laser technique and technology, as well as in scanning optics. The physical model of the local laser
thermoconsolidation process is described. The main types of the microoptical elements and their specific
parameters are presented.
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The results of the investigation of new class of the laser media based on dye
solutions impregnated microporous glasses are presented. Based on such media
high-effective active elements of tunable dye lasers and passive modulators for
solid-state lasers are created.
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