Spiral-phase-contrast imaging, which utilizes a spiral phase optical element, has proven to be effective in enhancing various aspects of imaging, such as edge contrast and shadow imaging. Typically, the implementation of spiral-phase-contrast imaging requires the formation of a Fourier plane through a 4f optical configuration in addition to an existing optical microscope. In this study, we present what we believe to be a novel single spiral-phase-objective, integrating a spiral phase plate, which can be easily and simply applied to a standard microscope, such as a conventional objective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrally encoded confocal microscopy (SECM) is a high-speed reflectance confocal microscopy technique. Here, we present a method to integrate optical coherence tomography (OCT) and SECM for complementary imaging by adding orthogonal scanning to the SECM configuration. The co-registration of SECM and OCT is automatic, as all system components are shared in the same order, eliminating the need for additional optical alignment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoactivated gas sensors that are fully integrated with micro light-emitting diodes (µLED) have shown great potential to substitute conventional micro/nano-electromechanical (M/NEMS) gas sensors owing to their low power consumption, high mechanical stability, and mass-producibility. Previous photoactivated gas sensors mostly have utilized ultra-violet (UV) light (250-400 nm) for activating high-bandgap metal oxides, although energy conversion efficiencies of gallium nitride (GaN) LEDs are maximized in the blue range (430-470 nm). This study presents a more advanced monolithic photoactivated gas sensor based on a nanowatt-level, ultra-low-power blue (λ = 435 nm) µLED platform (µLP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochip-based research is currently evolving into a three-dimensional and large-scale basis similar to the in vivo microenvironment. For the long-term live and high-resolution imaging in these specimens, nonlinear microscopy capable of label-free and multiscale imaging is becoming increasingly important. Combination with non-destructive contrast imaging will be useful for effectively locating regions of interest (ROI) in large specimens and consequently minimizing photodamage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWavelength-tunable spiral-phase-contrast (SPC) imaging was experimentally accomplished in the visible wavelengths spanning a broad bandwidth of ∼200 nm based on a single off-axis spiral phase mirror (OSPM). By the rotation of an OSPM, which was designed with an integer orbital angular momentum (OAM) of l = 1 at a wavelength of 561 nm and incidence angle of 45°, high-quality SPC imaging was obtained at different wavelengths. For the comparison with wavelength-tunable SPC imaging using an OSPM, SPC imaging using a spiral phase plate (manufactured to generate an OAM of l = 1 at 561 nm) was performed at three wavelengths (473, 561, and 660 nm), resulting in clear differences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuspended nanostructures play an important role in enhancing the performance of a diverse group of nanodevices. However, realizing a good arrangement and suspension for nanostructures of various shapes remains a significant challenge. Herein, a rapid and simple method for fabricating wafer-scale, highly uniform, well-arrayed suspended nanostructures nanowelding lithography is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis publisher's note contains corrections to Opt. Lett.46, 4216 (2021)OPLEDP0146-959210.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWavelength-tunable optical vortices with a topological charge equal to =1 of orbital angular momentum (OAM) were experimentally realized using a single off-axis spiral phase mirror (OSPM) with lasers of various visible-light wavelengths. Using an OSPM designed for 561 nm and an incidence angle of 45°, circular doughnut-shaped =1 optical vortices were obtained at 561, 473, and 660 nm by rotating the OSPM to modify the laser incidence angle. Wavelength-tunable =1 optical vortices were obtained at the respective incidence angles of 45°, 53.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlasmonic photothermal therapy (PPTT) using gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) has shown great potential for use in selective tumor treatment, because the AuNPs can generate destructive heat preferentially upon irradiation. However, PPTT using AuNPs has not been added to practice, owing to insufficient heating methods and tissue temperature measurement techniques, leading to unreliable and inaccurate treatments. Because the photothermal properties of AuNPs vary with laser power, particle optical density, and tissue depth, the accurate prediction of heat generation is indispensable for clinical treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, a portable and large-area blackbody system was developed following a series of processes including design, computational analysis, fabrication, and experimental analysis and evaluation. The blackbody system was designed to be lightweight (5 kg), and its temperature could exceed the ambient temperature by up to 15 °C under operation. A carbon-fiber-based heat source was used to achieve a uniform temperature distribution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a new, to the best of our knowledge, approach to correct image blurring due to the axial bulk motion of a sample in wavelength-sweeping Fourier domain parallel optical coherence tomography (OCT). This approach can estimate phase errors changing rapidly in time through direct measurements of the apparent axial shift during the sampling interval using common phase changes in parallel detection without additional hardware. To demonstrate the performance of the proposed algorithm, a single reflection and scattering sample were imaged with wavelength-sweeping parallel OCT implemented by scanning a spectrally dispersed line-field along the line direction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe periodic structure on the optical surface affects the beam shape and its propagation. As the size of the optical elements becomes larger and its shape becomes complicated, the quantitative analysis of the effect of the periodic structure on the optical surface becomes indispensable given that it is very difficult to completely eliminate the microscopic periodic structures. Herein, we have experimentally investigated Bragg scattering from an optical surface with extremely small aspect ratios (~10) and groove densities (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyze the interface trap states generated by the self-heating effect in flexible single-crystalline Si nanomembrane (sc-Si NM) transistors. Despite the excellent device performance (: ~61 mV/dec, : ~10, Nit: ~5 × 10 cm, eff: ~250 cm²/V·s) and mechanical flexibility ( ═ 1 mm) of sc-Si NM transistors on a polymer substrate, they are vulnerable to thermal reliability issues due to the poor thermal conductivity ( < 1 W/m·K) of the polymer substrate. Understanding the detailed mechanism driving heat-related device degradation is key to improving device reliability, life expectancy, and overall device performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recently, a combination of photodynamic therapy (PDT) and photothermal therapy (PTT) to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) and heat to kill cancer cells, respectively has attracted considerable attention because it gives synergistic effects on the cancer treatment by utilizing the radiation of nontoxic low-energy photons such as long wavelength visible light and near IR (NIR) penetrating into subcutaneous region. For the effective combination of the phototherapies, various organic photosensitizer-conjugated gold nanocomplexes have been developed, but they have still some disadvantages due to photobleaching and unnecessary energy transfer of the organic photosensitizers.
Results: In this study, we fabricated novel inorganic phototherapeutic nanocomplexes (Au NR-TiO NCs) by conjugating gold nanorods (Au NRs) with defective TiO nanoparticle clusters (d-TiO NP clusters) and characterized their optical and photothermal properties.
In this paper, we report on a confocal thermoreflectance imaging system that can examine the thermal characteristics of microelectronic devices by penetrating the backside of a device through the substrate. In this system, the local reflectivity variations due to heat generation in the device are measured point by point by a laser scanning confocal microscope capable of eliminating out-of-focus reflections and the thermoreflectance is extracted via Fourier-domain signal processing. In comparison to the conventional widefield thermoreflectance microscope, the proposed laser scanning confocal thermoreflectance microscope improves the thermoreflectance sensitivity by ~23 times and the spatial resolution by ~25% in backside thermoreflectance measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicro-electronic devices are increasingly incorporating miniature multi-layered integrated architectures. However, the localization of faults in three-dimensional structure remains challenging. This study involved the experimental and numerical estimation of the depth of a thermally active heating source buried in multi-layered silicon wafer architecture by using both phase information from an infrared microscopy and finite element simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPorous Au nanoplates (pAuNPs) were manufactured by a reducing agent-assisted galvanic replacement reaction on Ag nanoplates using a seed-mediated synthetic approach. Two core additives, poly(vinylpyrrolidone) and l-ascorbic acid, prevented fragmentation and proceeded secondary growth. By controlling the concentration of the additives and the amount of replacing ion AuCl, various nanostructures including nanoplates with holes, nanoframes, porous nanoplates, and bumpy nanoparticles with unity and homogeneity were synthesized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, a new and efficient dielectric-metal-dielectric-based thin-film encapsulation (DMD-TFE) with an inserted Ag thin film is proposed to guarantee the reliability of flexible displays by improving the barrier properties, mechanical flexibility, and heat dissipation, which are considered to be essential requirements for organic light-emitting diode (OLED) encapsulation. The DMD-TFE, which is composed of AlO, Ag, and a silica nanoparticle-embedded sol-gel hybrid nanocomposite, shows a water vapor transmission rate of 8.70 × 10 g/m/day and good mechanical reliability at a bending radius of 30 mm, corresponding to 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new technique is proposed for the activation of low temperature amorphous InGaZnO thin film transistor (a-IGZO TFT) backplanes through application of a bias voltage and annealing at 130 °C simultaneously. In this 'electrical activation', the effects of annealing under bias are selectively focused in the channel region. Therefore, electrical activation can be an effective method for lower backplane processing temperatures from 280 °C to 130 °C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThermoreflectance microscopy is essential in understanding the unpredictable local heating generation that occurs during microelectronic device operation. However, temperature measurements of multi-layered semiconductor devices represent a challenge because the thermoreflectance coefficient is quite small and is dramatically changed by the optical interference inside transparent layers of the device. Therefore, we propose a spectroscopic thermoreflectance microscopy system using a systematic approach for improving the quantitative temperature measurement of multi-layered semiconductor devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate simultaneous imaging of multiple fluorophores using wide-field epi-fluorescence microscopy with a monochrome camera. The intensities of the three lasers are modulated by a sinusoidal waveform in order to excite each fluorophore with the same modulation frequency and a different time-delay. Then, the modulated fluorescence emissions are simultaneously detected by a camera operating at four times the excitation frequency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectro-sterically stabilized gold suspensions were employed in a colorimetric system for the detection of strong acid in water. Using oleyamine and oleic acid as steric stabilizer in 1,2-dichlorobenzene, hydrophobic gold nanoparticles were first synthesized by a reduction reaction of gold salts and were then transferred into water with a cationic surfactant. When the hydrochlo- ric acid solution higher than critical concentration was injected, particles were quickly aggregated and precipitated, creating a clear solution from the colored suspension.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a technique for rapidly mapping absorbing defects in optical materials, which act as laser-induced damage precursors, based on full-field photothermal reflectance microscopy. An intensity-modulated pump beam heats absorbing defects in the optical sample, creating localized, modulated refractive-index variations around the defects. A probe beam then illuminates the defect sites, and the measured amplitude of the reflectance variation is used to map the distribution of defects in the medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a Fourier-domain filtering method for charge-coupled device (CCD)-based thermoreflectance microscopy to improve the thermal imaging speed while maintaining high thermal sensitivity. The time-varying reflected light distribution from the surface of bias-modulated microresistor was recorded by a CCD camera in free-run mode and converted to the frequency domain using the fast Fourier transform (FFT) for all pixels of the CCD. After frequency peak filtering followed by inverse FFT, a thermoreflectance image was obtained.
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