Opt Quant Electron (2015) 47:953–960
DOI 10.1007/s11082-014-9996-x
Low-cost bandpass filter for terahertz applications
Taylan Takan · Hakan Keskin · Hakan Altan
Received: 5 May 2014 / Accepted: 26 July 2014 / Published online: 13 September 2014
© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014
Abstract Compared to the visible and infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum,
development of optical components in the terahertz region has progressed slowly even though
the feature size of structures makes many of them easily attainable by many conventional
manufacturing techniques. Of these, the performance of components with machined metal
surfaces, such as filters, typically has suffered from the errors and inconsistencies in the
manufacturing which has led many to manufacture these using more expensive deposition
and processing tools. Here we show that by using a novel, high power Yb:doped pulsed
nanosecond fiber laser system with exceptional beam quality, aluminum metal surfaces can
be machined with high precision leading to a high quality band pass filter working in the
terahertz frequency range. The filter was laser machined on a 0.05 mm thick aluminum
substrate over a 1 cm
2
area where the unit cell in the pattern had an equilateral triangular
geometry in which the base length between the holes and the diameters were machined with
better than 4% accuracy. The produced structures are modeled by utilizing the obtained
structural parameters in a waveguide configuration and then characterized by the existing
home-built time-domain terahertz spectrometers in our laboratories. The results show a near
100 % power transmission at the desired terahertz frequency range which suggests that these
manufacturing techniques can be used to produce low-cost THz filters.
Keywords THz · TDS · Terahertz · Fiber laser · Filter
1 Introduction
With the rapid development of technologies in the terahertz region there is a need to develop
cost-effective optical components to be implemented in such systems. For applications which
require frequency selectivity, such as reducing radiation background levels for imaging pur-
poses or filtering noise for signal processing various types of filter structures can be utilized
T. Takan (B ) · H. Keskin · H. Altan
Department of Physics, Middle East Technical University Cankaya, 06800 Ankara, Turkey
e-mail: taylan.takan@metu.edu.tr
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