Spintronic devices rely on the spin degree of freedom (DOF), and spin orbit coupling (SOC) is the key to manipulate spin DOF. Quasi-one-dimensional structures, possessing marked anisotropy gives more choice for the manipulation of the spin DOF since the concrete SOC form varies along with crystallographic directions. The anisotropy of the Dresselhaus SOC in cadmium selenide (CdSe) nanobelt and nanowire was studied by circular photogalvanic effect. It was demonstrated that the Dresselhaus SOC parameter is zero along the [0001] crystallographic direction, which suppresses the spin relaxation and increases the spin diffusion length, and thus is beneficial to the spin manipulation. To achieve a device structure with Rashba SOC presence and Dresselhaus SOC absence for manipulating the spin DOF, an ionic liquid gate was produced on a nanowire grown along the [0001] crystallographic direction, and the Rashba SOC was induced by gating, as expected.
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Adv Mater Technol
September 2024
Fralin Biomedical Research Institute, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Roanoke, VA, 24016, USA.
Tweezers based on optical, electric, magnetic, and acoustic fields have shown great potential for contactless object manipulation. However, current tweezers designed for manipulating millimeter-sized objects such as droplets, particles, and small animals, exhibit limitations in translation resolution, range, and path complexity. Here, we introduce a novel acoustic vortex tweezers system, which leverages a unique airborne acoustic vortex end effector integrated with a three degree-of-freedom (DoF) linear motion stage, for enabling contactless, multi-mode, programmable manipulation of millimeter-sized objects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
September 2024
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology Dhaka 1205 Bangladesh
In this article, we report, to the best of our knowledge, for the first time, phase change material (PCM)-based reconfigurable metasurfaces for tailoring different degrees of freedom (DoF) of the quantum emitter (QE) emission, namely polarization and directionality, two key controlling factors in applications such as quantum computing, communication, and chiral optics. We have used a hybrid plasmon-QE coupled bullseye grating system utilizing the unexplored concept of composite nano-antennas in quantum photonics as the basic building block of the structures. Carefully engineered azimuthal width profile of the SbS/AlGaAs composite ridge and selectively controlled transition of PCM (SbS) states provide dynamic control over the amplitude and phase of the scattered radiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe systematically study the first- and second-order band topologies, which are tied to the pseudospin and valley degree of freedoms (DOFs), in honeycomb-kagome photonic crystals (HKPCs). We first demonstrate the quantum spin Hall phase as the first-order pseudospin-induced topology in HKPCs by observing the partial pseudospin-momentum locked edge states. By employing the topological crystalline index, we also discover the multiple corner states emerging in the hexagon-shaped supercell as the manifestation of the second-order pseudospin-induced topology in HKPCs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn allusion to the privacy and security problems in 3D point cloud classification, a novel privacy protection method for 3D point cloud classification based on optical chaotic encryption scheme is proposed and implemented in this paper for the first time. The mutually coupled spin-polarized vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (MC-SPVCSELs) subject to double optical feedback (DOF) are studied to generate optical chaos for permutation and diffusion encryption process of 3D point cloud. The nonlinear dynamics and complexity results demonstrate that the MC-SPVCSELs with DOF have high chaotic complexity and can provide tremendously large key space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomed Opt Express
December 2022
Visual Optics and Biophotonics Laboratory, Instituto de Óptica, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Calle Serrano 121, Madrid, 28006, Spain.
Adaptive optics (AO) visual simulators are excellent platforms for non-invasive simulation visual performance with new intraocular lens (IOL) designs, in combination with a subject own ocular aberrations and brain. We measured the through focus visual acuity in subjects through a new refractive IOL physically inserted in a cuvette and projected onto the eye's pupil, while aberrations were manipulated (corrected, or positive/negative spherical aberration added) using a deformable mirror (DM) in a custom-developed AO simulator. The IOL increased depth-of-focus (DOF) to 1.
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