October 2018
Spotlight Summary by Dmitry Morozov
Design of a sensitive uncooled thermal imager based on a liquid crystal Fabry–Perot interferometer
Infrared imaging in the Long Wave Infrared (LWIR) band (8–15 µm) has become crucial across many important application domains. Fields such as industrial thermography, firefighting, security scanning, and night vision will greatly benefit from compact, uncooled LWIR cameras with large pixel count, improved sensitivity, and fast frame rates.
In this paper, a team of researchers from Kent State University and MIT Lincoln Laboratory report on an important development in uncooled LWIR imager technology. The authors present an analysis of a novel LWIR imager scheme in which IR thermal sensors are separated from electrical read-out by means of liquid crystal transducers. In this concept, LWIR illumination from the scene is focused on the array of liquid crystal pixels. Upon absorption of IR radiation, the liquid crystal components heat up and change their optical properties. This change, in turn, is probed with visible light and detected by a readily available commercial imager, such as a CCD or CMOS camera. The authors propose a further improvement to the imager design by implementing a Fabry-Perot interferometer (étalon) structure to enhance optical probing of the liquid crystal pixel birefringence. The authors demonstrate through analytical and numerical modelling that an étalon leads to an order of magnitude improvement in sensitivity compared to direct probing of the liquid crystal layer.
The presented results indicate that the liquid crystal LWIR imager is a viable alternative to commonly used imagers based on micro-bolometers. Decoupling of IR sensor elements from the electronic readout allows excellent design flexibility, allowing tuning and optimization of each component individually. Furthermore, this work highlights the clear advantage of liquid crystal arrays in terms of scalability to large formats and suggests that further improvements in sensitivity are within reach.
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In this paper, a team of researchers from Kent State University and MIT Lincoln Laboratory report on an important development in uncooled LWIR imager technology. The authors present an analysis of a novel LWIR imager scheme in which IR thermal sensors are separated from electrical read-out by means of liquid crystal transducers. In this concept, LWIR illumination from the scene is focused on the array of liquid crystal pixels. Upon absorption of IR radiation, the liquid crystal components heat up and change their optical properties. This change, in turn, is probed with visible light and detected by a readily available commercial imager, such as a CCD or CMOS camera. The authors propose a further improvement to the imager design by implementing a Fabry-Perot interferometer (étalon) structure to enhance optical probing of the liquid crystal pixel birefringence. The authors demonstrate through analytical and numerical modelling that an étalon leads to an order of magnitude improvement in sensitivity compared to direct probing of the liquid crystal layer.
The presented results indicate that the liquid crystal LWIR imager is a viable alternative to commonly used imagers based on micro-bolometers. Decoupling of IR sensor elements from the electronic readout allows excellent design flexibility, allowing tuning and optimization of each component individually. Furthermore, this work highlights the clear advantage of liquid crystal arrays in terms of scalability to large formats and suggests that further improvements in sensitivity are within reach.
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Article Information
Design of a sensitive uncooled thermal imager based on a liquid crystal Fabry–Perot interferometer
Colin McGinty, Robert Reich, Harry Clark, Valerie Finnemeyer, Shaun Berry, and Philip Bos
Appl. Opt. 57(28) 8264-8271 (2018) View: Abstract | HTML | PDF