Crosstalk reduction for multi-channel optical phase metrology.

OPTICS EXPRESS(2020)

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Abstract
Digitally enhanced heterodyne interferometry (DEHI) combines the sub-wavelength displacement measurements of conventional laser interferometry with the multiplexing capabilities of spread-spectrum modulation techniques to discriminate between multiple electric fields at a single photodetector. Technologies that benefit from DEHI include optical phased arrays, which require the simultaneous phase measurement of a large number of electric fields. A consequence of measuring the phase of multiple electric fields is the introduction of crosstalk, which can degrade measurement precision. This work analytically and experimentally investigates the crosstalk when using DEHI to measure the phase of an arbitrarily large number of electric fields at a single photodetector. Also considered is the practical limit the dynamic range of the photodetector and shot noise imposes on the number of electric fields that can be discriminated. We describe how to minimize crosstalk by design. Experimental results demonstrate up to 55 dB suppression of crosstalk between two electric fields with a phase measurement bandwidth of 20 kHz and 1-10 pm/root Hz displacement sensitivity for audio frequencies. Additionally, we demonstrate scaling of crosstalk proportional to the square-root of the number of electric fields when using an M-sequence modulation. Based on this analysis, we estimate that digitally enhanced heterodyne interferometry should be capable of measuring the phase of several hundreds of electric fields at a single photodetector while maintaining the same measurement bandwidth. (C) 2020 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement
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