Prof. Lih-Yuan Lin
at Univ of Washington
SPIE Involvement:
Author | Instructor
Publications (16)

Proceedings Article | 21 February 2018 Open Access Paper
Chen Zou, Zonglong Zhu, Chun-Ying Huang, Lih Lin
Proceedings Volume 10529, 105290H (2018) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2289172
KEYWORDS: Crystals, Perovskite, Tin, Photodetectors, Lead, Diffusion, Gold, Metals

SPIE Journal Paper | 1 January 2009
JNP, Vol. 3, Issue 01, 031603, (January 2009) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.10.1117/1.3046754
KEYWORDS: Waveguides, Photodetectors, Nanophotonics, Molecular self-assembly, Electron beam lithography, Electrodes, Quantum dots, Near field optics, Silicon, Integrated optics

Proceedings Article | 1 February 2008 Paper
Milad Hashemi, Michael Hegg, Babak Parviz, Lih Lin
Proceedings Volume 6900, 690017 (2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.762119
KEYWORDS: Photodetectors, Optical imaging, Diffraction, Electrodes, Signal processing, Sensors, Spatial resolution, Image quality, Scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transforms

Proceedings Article | 14 September 2006 Paper
James Westphal, Antao Chen, Nathaniel Burt, Lih Lin, Larry Dalton, Jingdong Luo, Alex K.-Y. Jen
Proceedings Volume 6331, 63310H (2006) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.698378
KEYWORDS: Chromophores, Electrodes, Polymers, Electro optics, Molecules, Refraction, Nonlinear optics, Dielectric breakdown, Crystals, Waveguides

Proceedings Article | 12 November 2005 Paper
Proceedings Volume 6003, 600308 (2005) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.631879
KEYWORDS: Photodetectors, Integrated optics, Near field optics, Quantum dots, Transistors, Integrated circuits, Transducers, Metals, Electrodes, Tantalum

Showing 5 of 16 publications
Proceedings Volume Editor (2)

SPIE Conference Volume | 3 September 2002

SPIE Conference Volume | 18 October 2001

Conference Committee Involvement (18)
Optoelectronic Materials and Devices
13 November 2011 | Shanghai, China
Micro- and Nanotechnology: Materials, Processes, Packaging, and Systems IV
10 December 2008 | Melbourne, Australia
MEMS/MOEMS Technologies and Applications III
12 November 2007 | Beijing, China
Nanosensing: Materials, Devices, and Systems III
11 September 2007 | Boston, MA, United States
Active and Passive Optical Components for Communications VII
11 September 2007 | Boston, MA, United States
Showing 5 of 18 Conference Committees
Course Instructor
SC435: MEMS for Optical Networking
Fueled by rapid growth in demand for optical network capacity, combined with the sudden maturation of wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) technologies, the globe's long-haul optical networks are transforming themselves into systems that transport tens to hundreds of wavelengths per fiber, with each wavelength modulated at 10 Gb/s or more. As this happens, it becomes critical to seek new ways of not only surmounting the transmission obstacles associated with hundreds of closely spaced wavelength channels; it becomes imperative to find new ways of provisioning and restoring network traffic in units at roughly the wavelength level. These needs have stimulated a storm of evolution in optical-layer networking, as well as technological advancement on various fronts. Micro-electro-mechanical-systems (MEMS), being studied since 1980's, have recently emerged as a powerful means of implementing various key optical-network elements in compact and low-cost form, owing to the unique capability of this technology to integrate optical, mechanical, and electrical components on a single wafer. Various MEMS components and subsystems for optical-fiber communications, such as tunable lasers and filters, high-speed optical modulators, reconfigurable wavelength-add/drop multiplexers, dynamically adjustable gain-equalizers, tunable chromatic dispersion-compensators, polarization-controllers, polarization-mode-dispersion compensators, and optical crossconnects have been demonstrated. Some of the early resulting devices have already been moved, on exceptionally short timescales, to the brink of commercial realization. This course focuses on the applications of MEMS in various optical-fiber communication components and sub-systems. The aim is to provide a broad understanding of MEMS technology, and detailed principles of optical-network elements implemented by MEMS.
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