Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published November 1996 | public
Journal Article Open

Holographic storage dynamics in lithium niobate: theory and experiment

Abstract

We present a theoretical model that describes holographic ionic fixing and storage dynamics in photorefractive crystals. Holographic gratings that are based on charge redistribution inevitably decay because of ionic and electronic conduction. Relevant decay rates and transient hologram field expressions are derived. Ionic gratings are partially screened by trapped electrons on readout. The lifetimes of fixed ionic holograms are limited by the finite ionic conductivity at low (i.e., room) temperatures. Only under certain and restricted conditions can these decay times be acceptably long. A significant increase in fixed ionic hologram lifetime is realized in lithium niobate with a low hydrogen-impurity content. The residual ionic conductivity (decay-time constant) in these samples exhibits ~1.4-eV activation energy and is not due to protonic conduction. Fixed hologram lifetimes of ~2 years at room temperature in dehydrated lithium niobate crystals are projected.

Additional Information

© Copyright 1996 Optical Society of America Received January 2, 1996; revised manuscript received May 31, 1996 A. Yariv and S. Orlov acknowledge the support of an Advanced Research Projects Agency University Research Initiative Grant (L. N. Durvasula) and of the U.S. Army Research Office (R. Guenther). S. Orlov thanks Tak Cheung (Caltech) for his help with the measurements of the dark electronic decay (Fig. 5). G. Rakuljic acknowledges the support of the U.S. Army Research Office under contract DAAH04-95-C-0063, with funding from the Advanced Research Projects Agency. Part of this research was conducted while A. Yariv was a consultant to Accuwave Corporation.

Files

YARjosab96.pdf
Files (299.2 kB)
Name Size Download all
md5:557c7037731e6133730a1055498bdc1a
299.2 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 13, 2023