Browsing by Subject "Liquid crystal displays"
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Item Open Access Analysis of the longitudinal component of the electric field generated by flat and pixelated liquid crystal displays(IEEE, 2016-07) Külçe, Onur; Onural, LeventThe longitudinal, z, component of the electric field is investigated for the pixelated and flat liquid crystal displays (LCDs) for monochromatic case. The pixelation process is assumed to occur in free space. The z component is computed in the Fourier domain by using Gauss's Law from the x and y components of the output electric field. The effect of the display parameters are discussed for a y polarized display in a phase only operation. It is found that, in the low frequency regions, the size of the region of the large magnitudes becomes smaller as the width of the active region increases. Moreover, the validity of the scalar theory for a single pixel is evaluated for varying pixel sizes. It is shown that, when the ratio of the width of the active region to wavelength is between 1.5 and 5, the error decays with oscillations between 43% and 5%. When that ratio is larger than 15, the error does not exceed 3%. © 2016 IEEE.Item Open Access A new wireless asynchronous data communications module for industrial applications(2013) Ege, Y.; Şensoy, M.G.; Kalender O.; Nazlibilek, S.; Çitak H.All the sensors such as temperature, humidity, and pressure used in industry provide analog outputs as inputs for their control units. Wireless transmission of the data has advantages on wired transmission such as USB port, parallel port and serial port and therefore has great importance for industrial applications. In this work, a new wireless asynchronous data communications module has been developed to send the earth magnetic field data around a ferromagnetic material detected by a KMZ51 AMR sensor. The transmitter module transmits the analog data obtained from a source to a computer environment where they are stored and then presented in a graphical form. In this design, an amplitude shift keying (ASK) transceiver working at the frequency of 433.92 MHz which is a frequency inside the so called Industrial Scientific Medical band (ISM band) used for wireless communications. The analog data first fed into a 10-bit ADC controlled by a PIC microcontroller and then the digital data is sent to the transmitter. A preamble bit string is added in front of the data bits and another bit string for achieving synchronization and determination the start of the data is used. The data arriving at the receiver is taken by the microcontroller and sent to a LCD display as well as the serial port of a computer where it is written in a text file. A Visual Basic based graphics interface is designed to receive, store and present the data in the form of graphical shapes. In the paper, all the work has been explained in detail. © 2013 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Item Open Access Observation of polarized gain from aligned colloidal nanorods(Royal Society of Chemistry, 2015) Gao, Y.; Ta, V. D.; Zhao, X.; Wang Y.; Chen R.; Mutlugün, E.; Fong, K. E.; Tan S.T.; Dang C.; Sun, X. W.; Sun, H.; Demir, Hilmi VolkanIn recent years, colloidal semiconductor nanorods have attracted great interest for polarized spontaneous emission. However, their polarized gain has not been possible to achieve so far. In this work we show the highly polarized stimulated emission from the densely packed ensembles of core-seeded nanorods in a cylindrical cavity. Here CdSe/CdS dot-in-rods were coated and aligned on the inner wall of a capillary tube, providing optical feedback for the nanorod gain medium. Results show that the polarized gain originates intrinsically from the aligned nanorods and not from the cavity and that the optical anisotropy of the nanorod ensemble was amplified with the capillary tube, resulting in highly polarized whispering gallery mode lasing. The highly polarized emission and lasing, together with easy fabrication and flexible incorporation, make this microlaser a promising candidate for important color conversion and enrichment applications including liquid crystal display backlighting and laser lighting. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Item Open Access Reconstruction of computer generated holograms by spatial light modulators(Springer, 2006) Kovachev, Metodi; İlieva, Rossitza; Onural, Levent; Esmer, Gökhan Bora; Reyhan, Tarık; Benzie, P.; Watson, J.; Mitev, E.Computer generated holograms generated by using three different numerical techniques are reconstructed optically by spatial light modulators. Liquid crystal spatial light modulators (SLM) on transmission and on reflection modes with different resolutions were investigated. A good match between numerical simulation and optically reconstructed holograms on both SLMs was observed. The resolution of the optically reconstructed images was comparable to the resolution of the SLMs.