111 research outputs found

    Multiparametric Porous Silicon Sensors

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    We investigated the possibility of using several sensing parameters from porous silicon in order to improve gas selectivity. By fabricating porous silicon optical microcavities, three independent quantities can be measured, i.e. the electrical conductance, the photoluminescence intensity, and the wavelength of the optical resonance. We monitored the change of these three parameters as a function of NO2 (0.5-5 ppm), ethanol (300-15000 ppm) and relative humidity (0-100%). Preliminary results confirm that the examined species affect the parameters in a different way, both as a relative change and as dynamic

    Giant birefringence in optical antenna arrays with widely tailorable optical anisotropy

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    The manipulation of light by conventional optical components such as a lenses, prisms and wave plates involves engineering of the wavefront as it propagates through an optically-thick medium. A new class of ultra-flat optical components with high functionality can be designed by introducing abrupt phase shifts into the optical path, utilizing the resonant response of arrays of scatters with deeply-subwavelength thickness. As an application of this concept, we report a theoretical and experimental study of birefringent arrays of two-dimensional (V- and Y-shaped) optical antennas which support two orthogonal charge-oscillation modes and serve as broadband, anisotropic optical elements that can be used to locally tailor the amplitude, phase, and polarization of light. The degree of optical anisotropy can be designed by controlling the interference between the light scattered by the antenna modes; in particular, we observe a striking effect in which the anisotropy disappears as a result of destructive interference. These properties are captured by a simple, physical model in which the antenna modes are treated as independent, orthogonally-oriented harmonic oscillators

    Aberration-free ultra-thin flat lenses and axicons at telecom wavelengths based on plasmonic metasurfaces

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    The concept of optical phase discontinuities is applied to the design and demonstration of aberration-free planar lenses and axicons, comprising a phased array of ultrathin subwavelength spaced optical antennas. The lenses and axicons consist of radial distributions of V-shaped nanoantennas that generate respectively spherical wavefronts and non-diffracting Bessel beams at telecom wavelengths. Simulations are also presented to show that our aberration-free designs are applicable to high numerical aperture lenses such as flat microscope objectives

    All-linear time reversal by a dynamic artificial crystal

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    The time reversal of pulsed signals or propagating wave packets has long been recognized to have profound scientific and technological significance. Until now, all experimentally verified time-reversal mechanisms have been reliant upon nonlinear phenomena such as four-wave mixing. In this paper, we report the experimental realization of all-linear time reversal. The time-reversal mechanism we propose is based on the dynamic control of an artificial crystal structure, and is demonstrated in a spin-wave system using a dynamic magnonic crystal. The crystal is switched from an homogeneous state to one in which its properties vary with spatial period a, while a propagating wave packet is inside. As a result, a linear coupling between wave components with wave vectors kā‰ˆĻ€/a and kā€²=kāˆ’2Ļ€Ļ€/aā‰ˆāˆ’Ļ€/a is produced, which leads to spectral inversion, and thus to the formation of a time-reversed wave packet. The reversal mechanism is entirely general and so applicable to artificial crystal systems of any physical nature

    Porous Silicon

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    This article deals with generalities and definitions of porous silicon (PSi): fabrication techniques, structural properties, chemical properties, electronic properties, electrical properties, optical properties, and actual or potential applications of PSi. Optical properties include light transport, photoluminescence, and electroluminescenc

    CMOS fabrication of a light emitting diode based on silicon/porous silicon heterojunction

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    The fabrication in a standard CMO line of a light emitting diode (LED) based on silicon/porous silicon heterojunction is discussed. To fabricate the LED in a CMOS line, the porous silicon formation must be performed either as the last or as an intermediate step. The former option requires a masking layer to protect the metallization level of the CMOS devices from the electrochemical solution for the porous silicon formation, whereas the latter forces an interruption in the process. Experimental test on several materials, routinely used in CMOS processes, show that no standard mask is suitable to fully protect the CMOS from the electrochemical etch. Hence porous silicon formation should be performed as an intermediate ste

    CMOS compatible Si/SiO2 multilayers for Light Emitting Diodes

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    We report photoluminescence and electroluminescence at room temperature in diodes based on Si/SiO2 multilayers. The multilayers are fabricated by alternating Si and SiO2 layers, whose thickness is, respectively, 3.5 and 5 nanometers. In photoluminescence, a single band is observed, centered at 800 nm, which is due to electron-hole pair recombination under quantuum confinement. on the other hand, in electroluminescence, two bands are reported. The first band is in the infrared spectrum, and is blackbody radiation. The second band is visible, and is originated by relaxation of a single type of electrical carrier (electrons), as suggested by a fast decay time (less than 0.1 s). Possible mechanisms can be hot-electron relaxation or coupling with surface plasmon-polariton

    Silicon nanostructures for photonics

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    SPIE Nanotechnology E-Bulletin, November 2004 [invited

    Silicon nanostructures for Photonics

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    Using light to convey signals around electronic chips could solve several current problems in microelectronic evolution: these include power dissipation, interconnect bottleneck, input/output of the chip to optical communication channels, signal bandwidth
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