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1.IntroductionMany photodiodes are in fact polarization sensors. For some applications, a polarization sensitive photodiode might cause considerable error. If an optical device contains birefringent material or nonbirefringent material under stress in its light beam path, its performance may be affected as well. The most practical way to control the optical instrument polarization sensitivity is to depolarize the light beam by using a depolarizer. There are two common forms of optical depolarizers: wedge depolarizers and Lyot depolarizers. A wedge depolarizers consists of a crystalline quartz wedge together with a compensating fused silica wedge to correct the angular deviation.1 The optical axis of the quartz wedge lies in the plane of the wedge and at to the input polarization orientation, so a wedge depolarizer is sensitive to the polarization orientation of the incident light beam. Lyot depolarizers consist of two crystalline quartz plates assembled with their optical axes lying in the plane of the plates, aligned at .2, 3 One plate is twice the thickness of the other. This combination creates various degrees of elliptical polarization as a function of wavelength. Therefore, the Lyot depolarizer is not suitable for monochromatic light.4 2.Depolarizing MechanismCholesteric liquid crystal (CLC) is thermodynamically equivalent to nematic liquid crystal except for the chiral-induced twist in the directors. When the incident light wavelength is comparable to the helical pitch of CLC, the famous Bragg reflection occurs.5, 6 Because the helical pitch is much larger than the incident light wavelength, both the reflected and transmitted waves are plane-polarized.7, 8 If the helical pitch is between the two conditions mentioned previously, the polarization orientation and state of transmitted light is periodically modulated by the helical structure of CLC. A cholesteric liquid crystal depolarizer (CLCD) is a wedge-shaped cell filled with CLC material whose helical pitch is several times the length of the incident light wavelength. The structure of the CLCD is illustrated in Fig. 1. The CLC material is sandwiched between two transparent glass substrates coated with thin polyamide films. The liquid crystal molecules are planar aligned by rubbed polyimide films. Mylar spacers of different thickness are used to adjust the wedge angle. When polarized light is incident on a CLCD, the light beam can be viewed as divided into a great number of micro light beams. Each micro light beam with its polarization orientation and state will be differently modulated by the wedge-shaped CLCD, hence achieving the depolarization effect in space. 3.Experimental ResultsThe nematic liquid crystal SLC9023 and chiral dopants R811 are used to prepare CLC mixtures of different mixing ratios. A 532-nm continuous laser is used as the test light source. The diameter of the laser beam is . With a wave plate, the output beam polarization state from the 532-nm laser is changed from linear to circular. The CLCD was placed between a polarizer and an analyzer. As the analyzer rotated, the transmitted laser light was recorded, as illustrated in Fig. 2. To examine the depolarization performance of the proposed CLCD, CLCD cells of different wedge angles were made. Figure 3 illustrates the test results of a CLCD with a wedge angle of 1.43 deg and a chiral dopant mixing ratio of 10%. Test results show that without the CLCD inserted between the polarizer and the analyzer, the transmitted laser light intensity varies greatly as the analyzer was rotated. After inserting the CLCD cell, the amount of transmitted laser intensity variation is reduced to 4% while the analyzer was rotated. By changing the angle between the input polarization orientation and the rubbing direction of the CLCD cell, the transmitted laser intensity varies little. Fig. 3b shows that the variations of laser intensity are 2%, 6% with , , respectively. For testing the relationship between the depolarization effect and the wedge angle, another CLCD ( , ) is detected. Figure 4 shows the depolarization effect of the CLCD ( , ). The variations of laser intensity are 9%, 11%, 9% with , , , respectively. Experiment results show that the depolarization performance of the CLCD strongly depends on the wedge angle. AcknowledgmentsThe authors are grateful to Professor Zhan Sui for useful discussions. This work was supported by the CAEP Science Foundation (Grant No. 20040427). ReferencesN. J. Diorio,
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