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  5. Photorefractive properties of ion-implanted waveguides in strontium barium niobate crystals
 
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Photorefractive properties of ion-implanted waveguides in strontium barium niobate crystals

Publication date
1997
Document type
Conference paper
Author
Kip, Detlef 
Kemper, B.
Nee, I.
Pankrath, R.
Moretti, P.
Organisational unit
Universität Osnabrück
DOI
10.1007/s003400050305
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/14118
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-0031248822
ISSN
0946-2171
Conference
Topical Meeting on Photorefractive Materials, Effects, and Devices 1997
Series or journal
Applied Physics B Lasers and optics
Periodical volume
65
Periodical issue
4-5
First page
511
Last page
516
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
Nein
  • Additional Information
Abstract
Planar optical waveguides were formed in cerium-doped strontium barium niobate single crystals (Sr0.61Ba0.39 Nb2O6, SBN61), either by proton or helium ion implantation. Proton-implanted samples show a large increase of dark conductivity that reduces or even prevents the recording of refractive index gratings. For waveguides formed by helium implantation this effect is absent, and they can be used for efficient holographic recording. Photorefractive properties of the waveguides are investigated by two-beam coupling. After implantation with 2.0 MeV He+ and doses of (0.5 - 5) × 1015 cm-2, the samples have to be polarized again, because heating or charge effects at the crystals surface during the implantation process decreases or even reverses the effective electrooptic coefficients in the waveguiding layer. For repoled samples, we find logarithmic gain coefficients of up to 45 cm-1 with time constants for the build-up of the purely π/2-shifted refractive index grating of the order of 1 ms for the blue lines of an Ar+ laser. Photoconductivity depends nonlinearly on light intensity with an exponent x ≈ 0.55. With increasing implanted helium dose, both electronic and nuclear damage of the waveguiding layer grows, and the photorefractive properties of the waveguides are considerably degraded. © Springer-Verlag 1997.
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