The advent of high quality factor (Q) microphotonic-resonators has led to the demonstration of high-fidelity optical sensors of many physical phenomena (e.g. mechanical, chemical, and biological sensing) often with far better sensitivity than traditional techniques. Microphotonic-resonators also offer potential advantages as uncooled thermal detectors including significantly better noise performance, smaller pixel size, and faster response times than current thermal detectors. In particular, microphotonic thermal detectors do not suffer from Johnson noise in the sensor, offer far greater responsivity, and greater thermal isolation as they do not require metallic leads to the sensing element. Such advantages make the prospect of a microphotonic thermal imager highly attractive. Here, we introduce the microphotonic thermal detection technique, present the theoretical basis for the approach, discuss our progress on the development of this technology and consider future directions for thermal microphotonic imaging. Already we have demonstrated viability of device fabrication with the successful demonstration of a 20{micro}m pixel, and a scalable readout technique. Further, to date, we have achieved internal noise performance (NEP{sub Internal} < 1pW/{radical}Hz) in a 20{micro}m pixel thereby exceeding the noise performance of the best microbolometers while simultaneously demonstrating a thermal time constant ({tau} = 2ms) that is five times faster. Inmore » all, this results in an internal detectivity of D*{sub internal} = 2 x 10{sup 9}cm {center_dot} {radical}Hz/W, while roughly a factor of four better than the best uncooled commercial microbolometers, future demonstrations should enable another order of magnitude in sensitivity. While much work remains to achieve the level of maturity required for a deployable technology, already, microphotonic thermal detection has demonstrated considerable potential.« less
[1]
J. Johnson.
Thermal Agitation of Electricity in Conductors
,
1928
.
[2]
John L. Hall,et al.
Laser phase and frequency stabilization using an optical resonator
,
1983
.
[3]
R. Pound,et al.
Electronic frequency stabilization of microwave oscillators.
,
1946,
The Review of scientific instruments.
[4]
J. Mather.
Bolometer noise: nonequilibrium theory.
,
1982,
Applied optics.
[5]
Anthony L. Lentine,et al.
Thermal-Microphotonic Detection and Imaging.
,
2008
.
[6]
E. Black.
An introduction to Pound–Drever–Hall laser frequency stabilization
,
2001
.
[7]
Michael R. Watts,et al.
Optical resonators: Microphotonic thermal imaging
,
2007
.
[8]
Anthony Lawrence,et al.
Modern Inertial Technology: Navigation, Guidance, and Control
,
1993
.
[9]
Ady Arie,et al.
Performance analysis of Drever-Hall laser frequency stabilization using a proportional+integral servo
,
1997
.
[10]
D. A. Wilbur.
Thermal Agitation of Electricity in Conductors.
,
1932
.
[11]
Michael J. Shaw,et al.
Fabrication techniques for low-loss silicon nitride waveguides
,
2005,
SPIE MOEMS-MEMS.
[12]
Dieter Braun,et al.
Protein detection by optical shift of a resonant microcavity
,
2002
.
[13]
Michael R. Watts,et al.
Fabrication techniques for creating a thermally isolated TM-FPA (thermal microphotonic focal plane array)
,
2008,
SPIE MOEMS-MEMS.