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This thesis builds on recent innovations in multi-phase emulsion
droplet design to demonstrate that emulsion morphologies enable a
useful variety of dynamic optical phenomena. Despite the highly
dynamic nature of fluid morphologies and their utility for
stimuli-responsive, dynamic optical materials and devices, fluid
matter is underrepresented in optical technology. Using bi-phase
emulsion droplets as refractive micro-optical components, this
thesis realizes micro-scale fluid compound lenses with optical
properties that vary in response to changes in chemical
concentrations, structured illumination, and thermal gradients.
Theoretical considerations of emulsions as optical components are
used to explain a previously unrecognized total internal
reflection-enabled light interference phenomenon in emulsion
droplets that results in rich structural coloration. While this
work is focused on the fundamental optics of emulsion droplets, it
also facilitates the use of light-emitting emulsion morphologies as
chemo-optical transducers for early-stage food-borne pathogen
detection. This thesis beautifully demonstrates the virtue of
fundamental interdisciplinary exploration of unconventional
material systems at the interface of optics, chemistry, and
materials science, and the benefits arising from translation of the
acquired knowledge into specific application scenarios.
This thesis builds on recent innovations in multi-phase emulsion
droplet design to demonstrate that emulsion morphologies enable a
useful variety of dynamic optical phenomena. Despite the highly
dynamic nature of fluid morphologies and their utility for
stimuli-responsive, dynamic optical materials and devices, fluid
matter is underrepresented in optical technology. Using bi-phase
emulsion droplets as refractive micro-optical components, this
thesis realizes micro-scale fluid compound lenses with optical
properties that vary in response to changes in chemical
concentrations, structured illumination, and thermal gradients.
Theoretical considerations of emulsions as optical components are
used to explain a previously unrecognized total internal
reflection-enabled light interference phenomenon in emulsion
droplets that results in rich structural coloration. While this
work is focused on the fundamental optics of emulsion droplets, it
also facilitates the use of light-emitting emulsion morphologies as
chemo-optical transducers for early-stage food-borne pathogen
detection. This thesis beautifully demonstrates the virtue of
fundamental interdisciplinary exploration of unconventional
material systems at the interface of optics, chemistry, and
materials science, and the benefits arising from translation of the
acquired knowledge into specific application scenarios.
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