Broadband optical limiter based on nonlinear photoinduced anisotropy in bacteriorhodopsin film

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Abstract

Nonlinear photoinduced anisotropy in a bacteriorhodopsin film was theoretically and experimentally investigated and a broadband active optical limiter was demonstrated in the visible spectral range. A diode-pumped second harmonic yttrium aluminum garnet laser was used as a pumping beam and three different wavelengths at λ.=442, 532, and 655 nm from different lasers were used as probing beams. The pump and probe beams overlap at the sample. When the pumping beam is absent, the probing beam cannot transmit the crossed polarizers. With the presence of the pumping beam, a portion of the probing light is detected owing to the photoinduced anisotropy. Due to the optical nonlinearity, the transmitted probing beam intensity is clamped at a certain value, which depends on the wavelength, when the pumping beam intensity exceeds 5 mW/mm 2. Good agreement between theory and experiment is found. © 2004 American Institute of Physics.

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Huang, Y., Siganakis, G., Moharam, M. G., & Wu, S. T. (2004). Broadband optical limiter based on nonlinear photoinduced anisotropy in bacteriorhodopsin film. Applied Physics Letters, 85(22), 5445–5447. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1828590

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