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1.
Nano Lett ; 23(5): 1930-1937, 2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36815711

ABSTRACT

Optically Mie-resonant crystalline silicon nanoparticles have long attracted interest for their unique scattering behaviors. Here, we report a bottom-up nonthermal plasma process that produces highly monodisperse particles, with diameters controllable between 60 and 214 nm, by temporarily electrostatically trapping nanoparticles inside a continuous-flow plasma reactor. The particle size is tuned by adjusting the gas residence time in the reactor. By dispersing the nanoparticles in water, optical extinction measurements indicate colloidal solutions of a particle-based metafluid in which particles support both strong magnetic and electric dipole resonances at visible wavelengths. The spectral overlap of the electric and magnetic resonances gives rise to directional Kerker scattering. The extinction measurements show excellent agreement with Mie theory, supporting the idea that the fabrication process enables particles with narrow distributions in size, shape, and composition. This single-step gas-phase process can also produce Mie-resonant nanoparticles of dielectric materials other than silicon and directly deposit them on the desired substrates.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35549027

ABSTRACT

Optically induced magnetic resonances (OMRs) are highly tunable scattering states that cannot be reproduced in systems that only support electric resonances, such as in metals, lossy, or low-index materials. Despite offering unique scattering and coupling behavior, the study of OMRs in thin films has been limited by synthesis and simulation constraints. We report on the absorption and scattering response of OMR-based thin films composed of monodisperse crystalline silicon nanoparticles synthesized using a scalable nonthermal plasma growth technique and tractable simulation framework. The synthesis is solvent and ligand free, ensuring minimal contamination, and crystalline particles form with high yield and a narrow size distribution at close to room temperature. Using a scalable high-throughput deposition method, we deposit random particle films, without the need of a solid host matrix, showing near complete blackbody absorption at the collective OMR. This is achieved using 70% less material than an optimized antireflective-coated crystalline silicon thin film. The film exhibits strongly directional forward scattering with very low reflectivity, thus giving rise to angle- and polarization-insensitive antireflection properties across the visible spectrum. We find that, while commonly used effective medium models cannot capture the optical response, a modified effective medium accounting for multipole resonances and interparticle coupling shows excellent agreement with experiment. The effective permittivity and permeability are written in a mode and cluster resolved form, providing useful insight into how individual resonances and nanoparticle clusters affect the overall film response. Electric and magnetic-mode coupling show dramatically different behavior, resulting in uniquely different spectral broadening.

3.
Opt Express ; 28(24): 35784-35794, 2020 Nov 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33379687

ABSTRACT

Research on radiative cooling has attracted recent widespread interest owing to the potential for low-cost passive structures to enable large-scale thermal energy management. Using a generalized effective medium theory, we theoretically show that two-layer films comprised of SiO2 and Si3N4 nanoparticle layers on an Ag back reflector exhibit superior radiative cooling compared to single-layer or two-layer dense solid films, and can outperform other reported designs. The performance enhancement is a result of the ability to tune the nanoparticle fill fraction, which improves the spectral match between emissivity of this structure and the atmospheric transmission window. We also propose a standardized method for comparing the performance of radiative cooling structures reported by the research community.

4.
ACS Omega ; 5(38): 24754-24761, 2020 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33015493

ABSTRACT

Aluminum oxide, both in amorphous and crystalline forms, is a widely used inorganic ceramic material because of its chemical and structural properties. In this work, we synthesized amorphous aluminum oxide nanoparticles using a capacitively coupled nonthermal plasma utilizing trimethylaluminum and oxygen as precursors and studied their crystallization and phase transformation behavior through postsynthetic annealing. The use of two reactor geometries resulted in amorphous aluminum oxide nanoparticles with similar compositions but different sizes. Size tuning of these nanoparticles was achieved by varying the reactor pressure to produce amorphous aluminum oxide nanoparticles ranging from 6 to 22 nm. During postsynthetic annealing, powder samples of amorphous nanoparticles began to crystallize at 800 °C, forming crystalline θ and γ phase alumina. Their phase transformation behavior was found to be size-dependent in that powders of small 6 nm amorphous particles transformed to form phase-pure α-Al2O3 at 1100 °C, while powders of large 11 nm particles remained in the θ and γ phases. This phenomenon is attributed to the fast rate of densification and neck formation in small amorphous aluminum oxide particles.

5.
J Biomed Opt ; 24(2): 1-8, 2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30784244

ABSTRACT

We present a method of imaging angiographic structures in human extremities, including hands, arms, legs, and feet, using a newly developed photoacoustic computed tomography (PACT) system. The system features deep penetration (1.8 cm in muscular tissues) with high spatial and temporal resolutions. A volumetric image is acquired within 5 to 15 s while each cross sectional image is acquired within 100 µs. Therefore, we see no blurring from motion in the imaging plane. Longitudinal and latitudinal cross-sectional images of a healthy volunteer clearly show the vascular network of each appendage and highlight the system's ability to image major and minor vasculatures, without the use of an external contrast or ionizing radiation. We also track heartbeat-induced arterial movement at a two-dimensional frame rate of 10 Hz. This work substantiates the idea that PACT could be used as a noninvasive method for imaging human vasculatures.


Subject(s)
Arm/diagnostic imaging , Arteries/diagnostic imaging , Foot/diagnostic imaging , Hand/diagnostic imaging , Leg/diagnostic imaging , Photoacoustic Techniques/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Angiography/methods , Arm/blood supply , Artifacts , Equipment Design , Foot/blood supply , Hand/blood supply , Healthy Volunteers , Heart/physiology , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Leg/blood supply , Motion , Phantoms, Imaging , Radiation, Ionizing
6.
Opt Express ; 23(5): 6965-75, 2015 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25836916

ABSTRACT

We provide the first experimental demonstration of optical transmission characteristics of a W1 photonic crystal waveguide in silicon on sapphire at mid infrared wavelength of 3.43 µm. Devices are studied as a function of lattice constant to tune the photonic stop band across the single wavelength of the source laser. The shift in the transmission profile as a function of temperature and refractive index is experimentally demonstrated and compared with simulations. In addition to zero transmission in the stop gap, propagation losses less than 20 dB/cm are observed for group indices greater than 20 below the light line while more than 300 dB/cm propagation losses are observed above the light line, characteristic of the waveguiding behavior of photonic crystal line defect modes.

7.
Opt Lett ; 39(10): 3070-3, 2014 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24978276

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate subwavelength bidirectional grating (SWG) coupled slot waveguide fabricated in silicon-on-sapphire for transverse electric polarized wave operation at 3.4 µm wavelength. Coupling efficiency of 29% for SWG coupler is experimentally achieved. Propagation loss of 11 dB/cm has been experimentally obtained for slot waveguides. Two-step taper mode converters with an insertion loss of 0.13 dB are used to gradually convert the strip waveguide mode into slot waveguide mode.

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