50 research outputs found

    Multiband perfect absorbers using metal-dielectric films with optically dense medium for angle and polarization insensitive operation

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    The cavity resonant properties of planar metal-dielectric layered structures with optically dense dielectric media are studied with the aim of realizing omnidirectional and polarization-insensitive operation. The angle-dependent coupling between free-space and cavity modes are revealed to be a key leverage factor in realizing nearly perfect absorbers well-matched to a wide range of incidence angles. We establish comprehensive analyses of the relationship between the structural and optical properties by means of theoretical modeling with numerical simulation results. The presented work is expected to provide a simple and cost-effective solution for light absorption and detection applications that exploit planar metal-dielectric optical devices

    Localized Laser-Based Photohydrothermal Synthesis of Functionalized Metal-Oxides

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    We discuss the rapid in situ hydrothermal synthesis of metal oxide materials based on the photothermal superheating of light-absorbing metal layers for simple and facile on-demand placement of semiconductor materials with micrometer-scale lateral resolution. Localized heating from pulsed and focused laser illumination enables ultrafast growth of metal oxide materials with high spatiotemporal precision in aqueous precursor solution. Among many possible electronic and optoelectronic applications, the proposed method can be used for laser-based in situ real-time soldering of separated metal structures and electrodes with functionalized semiconductor materials. Resistive electrical interconnections of metal strip lines as well as sensitive UV detection using photohydrothermally grown metal oxide bumps are experimentally demonstrated

    Microenvironmental Geometry Guides Platelet Adhesion and Spreading: A Quantitative Analysis at the Single Cell Level

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    To activate clot formation and maintain hemostasis, platelets adhere and spread onto sites of vascular injury. Although this process is well-characterized biochemically, how the physical and spatial cues in the microenvironment affect platelet adhesion and spreading remain unclear. In this study, we applied deep UV photolithography and protein micro/nanostamping to quantitatively investigate and characterize the spatial guidance of platelet spreading at the single cell level and with nanoscale resolution. Platelets adhered to and spread only onto micropatterned collagen or fibrinogen surfaces and followed the microenvironmental geometry with high fidelity and with single micron precision. Using micropatterned lines of different widths, we determined that platelets are able to conform to micropatterned stripes as thin as 0.6 µm and adopt a maximum aspect ratio of 19 on those protein patterns. Interestingly, platelets were also able to span and spread over non-patterned regions of up to 5 µm, a length consistent with that of maximally extended filopodia. This process appears to be mediated by platelet filopodia that are sensitive to spatial cues. Finally, we observed that microenvironmental geometry directly affects platelet biology, such as the spatial organization and distribution of the platelet actin cytoskeleton. Our data demonstrate that platelet spreading is a finely-tuned and spatially-guided process in which spatial cues directly influence the biological aspects of how clot formation is regulated

    Characterization of Extended Width Optical Dipole Antennas

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    Optical dipole antennas with varying length and width are fabricated using e-beam lithography. Antennas with wider width are shown to exhibit stronger scattering while preserving the same resonance frequency

    Low Power Coherent Ising Machine Based on Mechanical Kerr Nonlinearity

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    Finding a reliable Ising machine for solving nondeterministic polynomial-class problems has attracted great attention in recent years, where an authentic system can be expanded with polynomial-scaled resources to find the ground state Ising Hamiltonian. In this Letter, we propose an extremely low power optomechanical coherent Ising machine based on a new enhanced symmetry breaking mechanism and highly nonlinear mechanical Kerr effect. The mechanical movement of an optomechanical actuator induced by the optical gradient force greatly increases the nonlinearity by a few orders and significantly reduces the power threshold using conventional structures capable of fabrication via photonic integrated circuit platforms. With the simple but strong bifurcation mechanism and remarkably low power requirement, our optomechanical spin model opens a path for chip-scale integration of large-size Ising machine implementations with great stability. © 2023 American Physical Society.FALS

    Direction-selective emission with small angular divergence from a subwavelength aperture using radiative waveguide modes

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    We investigate experimentally and theoretically the highly direction-selective emission with small angular divergence in a metal-dielectric-metal structure with a subwavelength metal aperture layer. The thicknesses of the dielectric layer and top metal layer play important roles in controlling the emission direction and angular divergence, respectively. Dispersion curve calculations based on the transfer matrix method indicate that the directional emission is mediated by radiative waveguide modes. We show that the directional emission in a metal-dielectric-metal structure is independent of the polarization of the incident light in contrast to plasmonic beaming structures, such as a subwavelength aperture surrounded by surface corrugations with a strong polarization dependence
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