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1.
J Biophotonics ; 17(3): e202300358, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38018656

ABSTRACT

The cochlea forms a key element of the human auditory system in the temporal bone. Damage to the cochlea continues to produce significant impairment for sensory reception of environmental stimuli. To improve this impairment, the optical cochlear implant forms a new research approach. A prerequisite for this method is to understand how light propagation, as well as scattering, reflection, and absorption, takes place within the cochlea. We offer a method to study the light distribution in the human cochlea through phantom materials which have the objective to mimic the optical behavior of bone and Monte-Carlo simulations. The calculation of an angular distribution after scattering requires a phase function. Often approximate functions like Henyey-Greenstein, two-term Henyey-Greenstein or Legendre polynomial decompositions are used as phase function. An alternative is to exactly calculate a Mie distribution for each scattering event. This method provides a better fit to the data measured in this work.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Cochlea , Humans , Scattering, Radiation , Monte Carlo Method , Light
2.
Materials (Basel) ; 16(1)2022 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36614443

ABSTRACT

Improved hearing restoration by cochlear implants (CI) is expected by optical cochlear implants (oCI) exciting optogenetically modified spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) via an optical pulse generated outside the cochlea. The pulse is guided to the SGNs inside the cochlea via flexible polymer-based waveguide probes. The fabrication of these waveguide probes is realized by using 6" wafer-level micromachining processes, including lithography processes such as spin-coating cladding layers and a waveguide layer in between and etch processes for structuring the waveguide layer. Further adhesion layers and metal layers for laser diode (LD) bonding and light-outcoupling structures are also integrated in this waveguide process flow. Optical microscope and SEM images revealed that the majority of the waveguides are sufficiently smooth to guide light with low intensity loss. By coupling light into the waveguides and detecting the outcoupled light from the waveguide, we distinguished intensity losses caused by bending the waveguide and outcoupling. The probes were used in first modules called single-beam guides (SBGs) based on a waveguide probe, a ball lens and an LD. Finally, these SBGs were tested in animal models for proof-of-concept implantation experiments.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(25): 22834-22839, 2019 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31142109

ABSTRACT

InGaN/GaN double heterostructures and multiquantum wells (MQWs) have been successfully developed since more than 20 years for LED lightning applications. Recent developments show that state-of-the-art LEDs benefit from artificially generated V-pit defects. However, the control of structural and chemical properties plays a tremendous role. In this paper, we report on the lateral distribution of V-pit defects and photoluminescence of InGaN/GaN MQWs grown on thick GaN on patterned sapphire substrates. The synchrotron-based scanning X-ray diffraction microscopy technique K-map was employed to locally correlate these properties with the local tilt, strain, and composition of the InGaN/GaN MQW. Compositional fluctuation is the main factor for the variation of photoluminescence intensity and broadening. In turn, V-pit defects align along small-angle grain boundaries and their strain fields are identified as a reason for promoting the InGaN segregation process on a microscale.

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