Inverse design and realization of an optical cavity-based displacement transducer with arbitrary responses

Qianbo Lu, Qingxiong Xiao, Chengxiu Liu, Yinan Wang, Qixuan Zhu, Manzhang Xu, Xuewen Wang, Xiaoxu Wang, Wei Huang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Optical cavity has long been critical for a variety of applications ranging from precise measurement to spectral analysis. A number of theories and methods have been successful in describing the optical response of a stratified optical cavity, while the inverse problem, especially the inverse design of a displacement sensitive cavity, remains a significant chal-lenge due to the cost of computation and comprehensive performance requirements. This paper reports a novel inverse design methodology combining the characteristic matrix method, mixed-discrete variables optimization algorithm, and Monte Carlo method-based tolerance analysis. The material characteristics are indexed to enable the mixed-discrete variables optimization, which yields considerable speed and efficiency improvements. This method allows arbitrary response adjustment with technical feasibility and gives a glimpse into the analytical characterization of the optical re-sponse. Two entirely different light-displacement responses, including an asymmetric sawtooth-like response and a highly symmetric response, are dug out and experimentally achieved, which fully confirms the validity of the method. The compact Fabry-Perot cavities have a good balance between performance and feasibility, making them promising candidates for displacement transducers. More importantly, the proposed inverse design paves the way for a universal design of optical cavities, or even nanophotonic devices.

Original languageEnglish
Article number220018
JournalOpto-Electronic Advances
Volume6
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023

Keywords

  • displacement transducer
  • inverse design
  • mixed-discrete variables optimization
  • optical cavity
  • stratified system

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