Publications by authors named "Shital Devinder"

Article Synopsis
  • The plasmonic integrated semiconductor enhances light-matter interactions for solar energy harvesting by offering a broader operational spectral range than traditional semiconductors, but it typically has limited efficiency at specific wavelengths.
  • The proposed Au-TiO Schottky photoelectrode utilizes a tailored plasmonic particle grating to significantly boost photon to electron conversion efficiency (IPCE), achieving up to seven times higher performance in certain light conditions.
  • The study confirms that the interaction between plasmonic modes and guided resonances in the grating structure leads to improved charge generation and longevity, presenting a novel integration approach for enhanced energy harvesting technologies.
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Quantitative phase imaging (QPI) enables nondestructive, real-time, label-free imaging of transparent specimens and can reveal information about their fundamental properties such as cell size and morphology, mass density, particle dynamics, and cellular fluctuations. Development of high-performance and low-cost quantitative phase imaging systems is thus required in many fields, including on-site biomedical imaging and industrial inspection. Here, we propose an ultracompact, highly stable interferometer based on a single-layer dielectric metasurface for common path off-axis digital holography and experimentally demonstrate quantitative phase imaging.

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Photonic biosensors are promising platforms for the rapid detection of pathogens with the potential to replace conventional diagnostics based on microbiological culturing methods. Intricately designed sensing elements with robust architectures can offer highly sensitive detection at minimal development cost enabling rapid adoption in low-resource settings. In this work, an optical detection scheme is developed by structuring guided mode resonance (GMR) on a highly stable, transparent silicon nitride (SiN) substrate and further biofunctionalized to identify a specific bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

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