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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.cityu.edu.hk/handle/2031/7468
Title: Study of reflectivity calculation errors in FDTD method with large angles of incidence
Authors: Chan, Ping Hoi (陳炳海)
Department: Department of Physics and Materials Science
Issue Date: 2014
Course: AP4217 Dissertation
Programme: Bachelor of Science (Honours) In Applied Physics
Instructor: Dr. Zapien, J. Antonio
Subjects: Reflectance -- Measurement.
Finite differences.
Time-domain analysis.
Citation: Chan, P. H. (2014). Study of reflectivity calculation errors in FDTD method with large angles of incidence (Outstanding Academic Papers by Students (OAPS)). Retrieved from City University of Hong Kong, CityU Institutional Repository.
Abstract: The Finite-Difference Time Domain (FDTD) solution is one of the most important software for simulating nano-scale material optical response experiments. Nano-scale material optical experiments are often difficult to be performed and analyzed because of the difficulty to manufacture the material and detect signal precisely. FDTD is a much more convenient and cost-effective way of doing the experiment because of the maturity of the computer technology nowadays. This project aims to have some basic insight on how to set up a numerically stable model using the FDTD commercial license to simulate thin film and multilayer stack optical experiment. Reflectivity is being measured in the thin film and multilayer stack setup. In this setup, the error of oblique incident is investigated because large angle of incidence is known to decrease accuracy of FDTD. Materials are with different optical properties, if we arrange them in a special manner, the optical properties of the material can be amazing, for example creating a photonic band gap, enhancing the light extraction efficiency of OLED and suppressing reflection. The multilayer stack setup is a 1D photonic crystal structure which is the simplest arrangement of dielectric to change the material reflectivity.
Appears in Collections:OAPS - Dept. of Physics 

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