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Evanescent Waves

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Evanescent Waves ... This leads to a an 'evanescent wave' that penetrates a small distance into the medium, n1. ... Evanescent Waves. The distance is not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evanescent Waves


1
Evanescent Waves
  • BMEN 489/689
  • Spring 2006

2
Evanescent Waves
  • Evanescent waves are electromagnetic waves that
    penetrate tens of nm through a surface and
    propagate along the surface
  • They may be used to sample volume outside a
    waveguide for sensing
  • They may be used to locally excite a sample on
    the other side of an interface for imaging
    TIRF, DCPM

3
EM Review Polarization
  • Light is a transverse electromagnetic wave
  • This means the electric and magnetic wave
    oscillate orthogonal to the direction of motion
  • The electric, or E, field can oscillate in the
    plane or out of the plane
  • This defines linearly (or planar) polarized light

4
EM Review
  • What happens when an EM wave hits a boundary
    between dielectric materials?
  • The tangential components of E and H must be
    continuous across the boundary
  • EiErEt
  • The choice of E and H sign convention is arbitrary

i
r
E
E
H
H
n0
n1
E
H
t
5
EM Review
  • For normal incidence, this yields the familiar
    Fresnel intensity coefficients
  • where It TI0, Ir RI0, I0 is the incident
    intensity, Ir is the reflected intensity and It
    is the transmitted intensity
  • Note the RT1 and I /E/2

6
EM Review
E
  • At oblique incidence, things get a little more
    interesting

i
r
H
?0
E
H
n0
n1
E
?1
H
t
  • where R /r/2 and T/t/2(n1cos?1/n0cos?0)
  • We also have Snells law
  • n0sin?0 n1sin?1

7
EM Review
  • If n0 gt n1, we have ?1 gt ?0 i.e. the transmitted
    angle will be greater than the incident angle
  • At some critical angle, ?0 ?c, the transmitted
    angle will be 90º
  • ?c sin-1(n1/n0)
  • glass (n1.5)/H2O (n1.33) ? ?c 63º
  • At this angle and beyond (? gt ?c), all the light
    will be reflectedTotal Internal Reflection

8
Evanescent Waves
  • However, those pesky boundary conditions still
    exist tangential components of E and H must be
    continuous across boundary
  • This leads to a an evanescent wave that
    penetrates a small distance into the medium, n1.
  • This wave propagates parallel to the surface

z
propagation direction
n1
n0
? gt ?c
9
Evanescent Waves
  • The wave decays exponentially with distance from
    the interface
  • The distance is dependent upon the angle of
    incidence and wavelength generally lt ?0

z
propagation direction
n1
n0
? gt ?c
10
Evanescent Waves
  • The distance is not dependent on the polarization
    of the light
  • However, the intensity at the interface is
    polarization dependent

11
Evanescent Waves
  • The parallel polarization is more intense than
    perpendicular, but both can be greater than the
    incident intensity

Simulation for n0 1.5 and n1 1.33
12
Evanescent Waves
  • The polarization of the evanescent wave depends
    on the incident wave
  • For an s-polarized incident wave, the
    polarization remains s-polarized, but has a phase
    lag, d-

d-
13
Evanescent Waves
  • For parallel polarization, the polarization of
    the evanescent field cartwheels along the
    interface

d//
14
Goos-Hanchen Shift
  • The existence of the phase lags, d// and d-, give
    rise to a measurable longitudinal shift of a
    finite beam called the Goos-Hanchen shift
  • Valid for ? ?c
  • Physically we can view this as energy crossing
    the interface, flowing along surface and
    re-entering

s
? gt ?c
15
Goos-Hanchen Shift
  • As ???c, the shift gets larger
  • As ??p/2, the shift is a small fraction of the
    wavelength
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