High speed, wide range, and high precise beam steering technology are fundamental to free-space optical communication (FSO). Liquid crystal optical phased array (LC-OPA) is capable of achieving non-mechanical beam steering. This paper demonstrates a parallel, four-communication access beam deflection antenna based on LC-OPA, providing a large aperture, wide steering range, and high pointing precision. This antenna is composed of a coarse tracking subsystem using cascaded liquid crystal polarized grating (LCPG) and a fine tracking subsystem based on LC-OPA. The optical aperture is 80 mm × 80 mm, arranged in 2 × 2 subapertures, each serving a single wavelength beam. Besides, a cascaded control platform based on field programmable gate array is proposed to realize low-latency response. This optical antenna achieves a steering resolution of 20 μrad and covers a range of ±12 deg in two dimensions, laying the foundation for simultaneous access of multiple terminals in FSO communication network.
Liquid crystal spatial light modulators (LC-SLMs) are usually polarization sensitive optical elements. In this paper, we propose a polarization-independent beam steering system to overcome the polarization problem of conventional liquid crystal devices by employing two polarization-dependent LC-SLMs, a polarizing beam splitter and a half-wave plate. In this system, two one-dimensional LC-SLMs are aligned orthogonally to deflect the beam in azimuthal and elevation, respectively. This system enables LC-SLMs to work in any polarization state of incident light, and can realize continuous two-dimensional laser beam pointing. Properties of polarization-independence as well as two-dimensional beam steering were mathematically and experimentally verified with a good agreement. Using the well aligned beam steering system, linearly polarized beams in different polarization angle are deflected with high accuracy and efficiency. The measured angular deviations are less than 5 micro-radians to show a high-accuracy beam steering of the system. This polarization-independent beam steering scheme is useful in the applications of nonmechanical laser communication, Lidar, and other LC-based devices.
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