Publications by authors named "Ursula J Gibson"

Article Synopsis
  • Polycrystalline silicon-germanium (SiGe) core fibers have been developed as flexible platforms for advanced optoelectronic devices, showing promise for higher performance than traditional silicon fibers due to their enhanced nonlinear properties and adjustable composition.
  • A specific type of SiGe core fiber was created using a molten core drawing method and improved with CO laser irradiation to ensure core uniformity, followed by a fiber tapering technique to optimize its transmission properties.
  • The resulting SiGe fiber demonstrated low linear loss across a mid-infrared wavelength range and showed improved nonlinear performance, suggesting significant potential for future applications in nonlinear photonics, especially in the >2 µm wavelength region.
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Originally developed for metrology, optical frequency combs are becoming increasingly pervasive in a wider range of research topics including optical communications, spectroscopy, and radio or microwave signal processing. However, application demands in these fields can be more challenging as they require compact sources with a high tolerance to temperature variations that are capable of delivering flat comb spectra, high power per tone, narrow linewidth and high optical signal-to-noise ratio. This work reports the generation of a flat, high power frequency comb in the telecom band using a 17 mm fully-integrated silicon core fibre as a parametric mixer.

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The molten core drawing method allows scalable fabrication of novel core fibres with kilometre lengths. With metal and semiconducting components combined in a glass-clad fibre, CO laser irradiation was used to write localised structures in the core materials. Thermal gradients in axial and transverse directions allowed the controlled introduction, segregation and chemical reaction of metal components within an initially pure silicon core, and restructuring of heterogeneous material.

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A strong Raman enhancement to the four-wave mixing (FWM) conversion efficiency is obtained in a silicon core fiber (SCF) when pumped with a continuous-wave (CW) source in the telecom band. By tapering the SCFs to alter the core diameter and length, the role of phase-matching on the conversion enhancement is investigated, with a maximum Raman enhancement of ∼15 dB obtained for an SCF with a zero dispersion wavelength close to the pump. Simulations show that by optimizing the tapered waist diameter to overlap the FWM phase-matching with the peak Raman gain, it is possible to obtain large Raman enhanced FWM conversion efficiencies of up to ∼2 dB using modest CW pump powers over wavelengths covering the extended telecom bands.

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Novel core fibers have a wide range of applications in optics, as sources, detectors and nonlinear response media. Optoelectronic, and even electronic device applications are now possible, due to the introduction of methods for drawing fibres with a semiconductor core. This review examines progress in the development of glass-clad, crystalline core fibres, with an emphasis on semiconducting cores.

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High speed optical modulation of THz radiation is of interest for information processing and communications applications. In this paper infrared femtosecond pulses are used to generate free carriers that reduce the THz transmission of silicon based waveguides over a broad spectral range. Up to 96% modulation is observed from 0.

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Reported here is the fabrication of tapered silicon core fibers possessing a nano-spike input that facilitates their seamless splicing to conventional single mode fibers. A proof-of-concept 30 µm cladding diameter fiber-based device is demonstrated with nano-spike coupling and propagation losses below 4 dB and 2 dB/cm, respectively. Finite-element-method-based simulations show that the nano-spike coupling losses could be reduced to below 1 dB by decreasing the cladding diameters down to 10 µm.

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Glass fibres with silicon cores have emerged as a versatile platform for all-optical processing, sensing and microscale optoelectronic devices. Using SiGe in the core extends the accessible wavelength range and potential optical functionality because the bandgap and optical properties can be tuned by changing the composition. However, silicon and germanium segregate unevenly during non-equilibrium solidification, presenting new fabrication challenges, and requiring detailed studies of the alloy crystallization dynamics in the fibre geometry.

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We propose and demonstrate a novel approach to obtaining small-core polysilicon waveguides from the silicon fiber platform. The fibers were fabricated via a conventional drawing tower method and, subsequently, tapered down to achieve silicon core diameters of ∼1  μm, the smallest optical cores for this class of fiber to date. Characterization of the material properties have shown that the taper process helps to improve the local crystallinity of the silicon core, resulting in a significant reduction in the material loss.

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In this study, we demonstrate a solar cell design based on horizontally aligned microwires fabricated from 99.98% pure silicon via the molten core fiber drawing method. A similar structure consisting of 50 μm diameter close packed wires (≈ 0.

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Density functional theory was used to study the structural and electronic properties of endohedrally- and substitutionally-doped Zn6S6 and Zn12S12 clusters with first-row transition metal atoms. Generally, the lowest energy electronic state of the cluster is that with the maximum multiplicity (Ti and Cr are exceptions). Substitutionally-doped clusters have greater binding energies (per atom) for both cluster sizes, providing an indication that similar doping will be preferred in the bulk material as well.

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Matrix assisted pulsed laser evaporation was used to deposit molecularly imprinted polymer films of an amphiphilic block copolymer imprinted with an amino acid. This method avoids the need for a common solvent for host and template, and permits fabrication of layers with controlled thicknesses in the nanometer range. Polystyrene-block-polyethylene oxide copolymer and phenylalanine template were co-deposited onto surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensors from a water/toluene emulsion.

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Article Synopsis
  • Pure and co-doped ZnO nanowire arrays were effectively grown on polished silicon substrates using a high-rate electrochemical method.
  • Applying a negative potential to the substrate significantly boosted the nucleation density by over 10,000 times and increased the growth rate by 35 times compared to non-potential-assisted methods.
  • The technique also allows for the incorporation of metallic dopants into the ZnO nanowires, making it a promising way to produce low-cost, highly oriented nanowires for various industrial uses.
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We report on the formation of highly anisotropic nanotube composite materials, made by the attachment of gold nanoparticles to the surface of the single-walled carbon nanotubes, followed by preparation of an aligned composite film by compression in a Langmuir-Blodgett trough. The gold is attached in a one-step sonication procedure. The gold-modified nanotube material forms a stable suspension in toluene and has been characterized by atomic force and scanning force microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and Raman spectroscopy.

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While the alignment and rotation of microparticles in optical traps have received increased attention recently, one of the earliest examples has been almost totally neglected--the alignment of particles relative to the beam axis, as opposed to about the beam axis. However, since the alignment torques determine how particles align in a trap, they are directly relevant to practical applications. Lysozyme crystals are an ideal model system to study factors determining the orientation of nonspherical birefringent particles in a trap.

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