songfork32
songfork32
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By applying appropriate compensation strategies, we show that it is possible to realize high-quality beam steering even when the pixel performance is non-ideal, with intensity of the secondary lobes two orders of magnitude smaller than the main lobe.The absorption of infrared radiation within ultra-thin metallic films is technologically relevant for different thermal engineering applications and optoelectronic devices, as well as for fundamental research on sub-nanometer and atomically-thin materials. However, the maximal attainable absorption within an ultra-thin metallic film is intrinsically limited by both its geometry and material properties. Here, we demonstrate that material-based high-impedance surfaces enhance the absorptivity of the films, potentially leading to perfect absorption for optimal resistive layers, and a fourfold enhancement for films at deep nanometer scales. Moreover, material-based high-impedance surfaces do not suffer from spatial dispersion and the geometrical restrictions of their metamaterial counterparts. We provide a proof-of-concept experimental demonstration by using titanium nanofilms on top of a silicon carbide substrate.Lensless imaging has recently become an alternative and cost-effective choice for many macro and micro applications, like wave-front sensing, fluorescence imaging, holographic microscopy, and so on. However, the polarized imaging, especially the cross-polarized light, has rarely been explored and integrated in lensless imaging methods. In this paper, we introduce the cross-polarized illumination into the lensless system for high-contrast and background-free imaging of plant samples. We capture a snapshot measurement and apply the blind deconvolution for reconstruction, obtaining the depolarized imaging of plant samples. Experiments exhibit the specific and sparse structures of the root system and vessel distribution of samples. We also build a corresponding lens-based system for performance comparison. This proposed lensless system is believed to have the potential in studies on the root development and water transport mechanism of plants in the future.Since the discovery of two dimensional (2D) materials, there has been a gold rush for van der Waals integrated 2D material heterostructure based optoelectronic devices. Van der Waals integration involves the physical assembly of the components of the device. In the present work, we extended van der Waals integration from 2D materials to three-dimensional (3D) materials, and herein we uniquely designed a van der Waals contacted light emitting diode based on MoOx staked ZnO/GaN heterostructure. The presence of the MoOx layer between n-type ZnO and p-type GaN leads to the confinement of electrons and an increase in the electron charge density at n-type ZnO. The n-type MoOx, a well-known hole injection layer, favors the availability of holes at the ZnO site, leading to the efficient recombination of electrons and holes at the ZnO site, which results in predominant high-intensity UV-EL emission around 380 nm in both forward and reverse bias.Metasurfaces exhibit unique optical properties that depend on the ratio of their refractive index and that of their surroundings. As such, they are effective for sensing global changes in refractive index based on the shifts of resonances in their reflectivity spectra. However, when used as a biosensor, the metasurface can be exposed to a spatial distribution of biomolecules that brings about gradients in refractive index along the plane of the metasurface. Such gradients produce complex global reflectivity spectrum but with distinct optical enhancements in localized areas along the metasurface. Here, we propose a unique sensing paradigm that images and maps out the optical enhancements that are correlated with the spatial distribution of the refractive index. Moreover, we designed a metasurface whose resonances can be tuned to detect a range of refractive indices. Our metasurface consists of silicon nanopillars with a cylindrical nanotrench at their centers and a metal plane at the base. To assess its feasibility, we performed numerical simulations to show that the design effectively produces the desired reflectivity spectrum with resonances in the near-infrared. Using an incident light tuned to one of its resonances, our simulations further show that the field enhancements are correlated with the spatial mapping of the gradients of refractive indices along the metasurface.The large index contrast and the subwalength tranverse dimensions of nanowires induce strong longitudinal electric field components. IDF-11774 nmr We show that these components play an important role for second harmonic generation in III-V wire waveguides. To illustrate this behavior, an efficiency map of nonlinear conversion is determined based on full-vectorial calculations. It reveals that many different waveguide dimensions and directions are suitable for efficient conversion of a fundamental quasi-TE pump mode around the 1550 nm telecommunication wavelength to a higher-order second harmonic mode.Aiming at achieving metamaterials (MTM)-based enhanced transmission through the sub-wavelength aperture on a metallic isolating plate in specific frequency band, the topology optimization method for MTM microstructure design was proposed. The MTM was inserted in the sub-wavelength aperture and perpendicular to the isolating plate. A piecewise preset function was employed to describe the expected enhanced and non-enhanced transmission frequency band. The transmission coefficient of the waveguide system with the designed MTM was mapped to a step mapping function. In the topology optimization of the MTM configuration, matching the mapping function to the preset function was chosen as the design objective. Three designs aiming at different specific enhanced transmission frequency band were carried out. The design satisfied the demand for the specific enhanced transmission frequency band, which was also validated by experiment.Single-photon avalanche diode arrays can provide both the spatial and temporal information of each detected photon. We present here the characterization of spatially entangled photons with a 32 × 32 pixel sensor, specifically designed for quantum imaging applications. The sensor is time-tagging each detection event at pixel level with sub-nanosecond accuracy within frames of 50 ns. The spatial correlations between any number of detections in a defined temporal window can thus be directly extracted from the data.The space-momentum entanglement of photon pairs is demonstrated by violating an EPR-type inequality directly from the measured near-field correlations and far-field anti-correlations.

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