Description
Handbook of Optoelectronics offers a self-contained reference from the basic science and light sources to devices and modern applications across the entire spectrum of disciplines utilizing optoelectronic technologies. This second edition gives a complete update of the original work with a focus on systems and applications.
Volume I covers the details of optoelectronic devices and techniques including semiconductor lasers, optical detectors and receivers, optical fiber devices, modulators, amplifiers, integrated optics, LEDs, and engineered optical materials with brand new chapters on silicon photonics, nanophotonics, and graphene optoelectronics. Volume II addresses the underlying system technologies enabling state-of-the-art communications, imaging, displays, sensing, data processing, energy conversion, and actuation. Volume III is brand new to this edition, focusing on applications in infrastructure, transport, security, surveillance, environmental monitoring, military, industrial, oil and gas, energy generation and distribution, medicine, and free space.
No other resource in the field comes close to its breadth and depth, with contributions from leading industrial and academic institutions around the world. Whether used as a reference, research tool, or broad-based introduction to the field, the Handbook offers everything you need to get started. (The previous edition of this title was published as Handbook of Optoelectronics, 9780750306461.)
John P. Dakin, PhD, is professor (emeritus) at the Optoelectronics Research Centre, University of Southampton, UK.
Robert G. W. Brown, PhD, is chief executive officer of the American Institute of Physics and an adjunct full professor in the Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic at the University of California, Irvine.
Table of Contents
Series preface
Introduction to the Second Edition
Introduction to the First Edition
Editors
Contributors
Part I ENABLING TECHNOLOGIES FOR COMMUNICATIONS
1 Optical transmission
Michel Joindot and Michel Digonnet
2 Optical network architectures
Ton Koonen
3 Optical switching and multiplexed architectures
Dominique Chiaroni
Part II ENABLING TECHNOLOGIES FOR IMAGING AND DISPLAYS
4 Camera technology
Kenkichi Tanioka, Takao Ando, and Masayuki Sugawara
5 Vacuum tube and plasma displays
Makoto Maeda, Tsutae Shinoda, and Heiju Uchiike
6 Liquid crystal displays
J. Cliff Jones
7 Technology and applications of spatial light modulators
Uzi Efron
8 Organic electroluminescent displays
Euan Smith
9 Three-dimensional display systems
Nick Holliman
10 Optical scanning and printing
Ron Gibbs
Part III ENABLING TECHNOLOGIES FOR SENSING, DATA PROCESSING, ENERGY CONVERSION, AND ACTUATION
11 Optical fiber sensors
John P. Dakin, Kazuo Hotate, Robert A. Lieberman, and Michael A. Marcus
12 Remote optical sensing by laser
J. Michael Vaughan Worcestershire
13 Optical information storage and recovery
Susanna Orlic
14 Optical information processing
John N. Lee
15 Spectroscopic analysis
Günter Gauglitz and John P. Dakin
16 Optical to electrical energy conversion: Solar cells
Tom Markvart and Fernando Araujo de Castro
17 Optical nano- and microactuation
George K. Knopf
Part IV OPTOELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
18 The art of practical optoelectronic systems
Anthony E. Smart
Index