Publications
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Jump to search filtersAnalysis of Fixed Retina Samples
Abstract not provided.
Optical Magnetic Mirrors using All Dielectric Metasurfaces
Abstract not provided.
Metamaterials Strongly Coupled to Intersubband Transitions: Circuit Model and Second Order Nonlinear Processes
Abstract not provided.
Directional perfect absorption using deep subwavelength films close to the epsilon-near-zero frequency
Physics Review X
Abstract not provided.
Coupling between a metasurface and intersubband transitions in a quantum well explained via classical electrodynamics
Abstract not provided.
Second harmonic generation from metamaterials strongly coupled to intersubband transitions in quantum wells
Applied Physics Letters
Abstract not provided.
A Novel Approach to Unknown Virus Identification in Clinical Samples
Abstract not provided.
A Novel Approach to Unknown Virus Detection in Clinical Samples
Abstract not provided.
Label-free measurement of algal triacylglyceride production using fluorescence hyperspectral imaging
Algal Research
Microalgae have been identified as a promising renewable feedstock for production of lipids for feeds and fuels. Current methods for identifying algae strains and growth conditions that support high lipid production require a variety of fluorescent chemical indicators, such as Nile Red and more recently, Bodipy. Despite notable successes using these approaches, chemical indicators exhibit several drawbacks, including non-uniform staining, low lipid specificity, cellular toxicity, and variable permeability based on cell-type, limiting their applicability for high-throughput bioprospecting. In this work, we used in vivo hyperspectral confocal fluorescence microscopy of a variety of potential microalgae production strains (Nannochloropsis sp., Dunaliella salina, Neochloris oleoabundans, and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii) to identify a label-free method for localizing lipid bodies and quantifying the lipid yield on a single-cell basis. By analyzing endogenous fluorescence from chlorophyll and resonance Raman emission from lipid-solubilized carotenoids we deconvolved pure component emission spectra and generated diffraction limited projections of the lipid bodies and chloroplast organelles, respectively. Applying this imaging method to nutrient depletion time-courses from lab-scale and outdoor cultivation systems revealed an additional autofluorescence spectral component that became more prominent over time, and varied inversely with the chlorophyll intensity, indicative of physiological compromise of the algal cell. This signal could result in false-positives for conventional measurements of lipid accumulation (via spectral overlap with Nile Red), however, the additional spectral feature was found to be useful for classification of lipid enrichment and culture crash conditions in the outdoor cultivation system. Under nutrient deprivation, increases in the lipid fraction of the cellular volume of ~. 500% were observed, as well as a correlated decrease in the chloroplast fraction of the total cellular volume. The results suggest that a membrane recycling mechanism dominates for nutrient deprivation-based lipid accumulation in the microalgae tested.
Optical magnetic mirrors without metals
Optica
The reflection of an optical wave from metal, arising from strong interactions between the optical electric field and the free carriers of the metal, is accompanied by a phase reversal of the reflected electric field. A far less common route to achieving high reflectivity exploits strong interactions between the material and the optical magnetic field to produce a “magnetic mirror” that does not reverse the phase of the reflected electric field. At optical frequencies, the magnetic properties required for strong interaction can be achieved only by using artificially tailored materials. Here, we experimentally demonstrate, for the first time to the best of our knowledge, the magnetic mirror behavior of a low-loss all-dielectric metasurface at infrared optical frequencies through direct measurements of the phase and amplitude of the reflected optical wave. The enhanced absorption and emission of transverse-electric dipoles placed close to magnetic mirrors can lead to exciting new advances in sensors, photodetectors, and light sources.
Maximizing Strong Coupling between Metasurface Resonators and Intersubband Transitions
Abstract not provided.
Strong coupling in the sub-wavelength limit using metamaterial nanocavities
Nature Communications
Abstract not provided.
Strong coupling in the sub-wavelength limit using metamaterial nanocavities
Nature Communications
Abstract not provided.
Monolithic metallic nanocavities for strong light-matter interaction to quantum-well intersubband excitations
Opt. Express
Abstract not provided.
Epsilon-Near-Zero Strong Coupling in Metamaterial-Semiconductor Hybrid Structures
Nano Letters
Abstract not provided.
A Novel Approach to Unknown Virus Identification in Clinical Samples
Abstract not provided.
Photosystem segregation in cyanobacterial thylakoids
Abstract not provided.
Ultra-strong light-matter interaction with mid-infrared metamaterials
Abstract not provided.
Influence of the Metamaterial Geometry on Ultra-Strong Light-Matter Interaction
Abstract not provided.
Hyperspectral Imaging
Abstract not provided.
A Novel Approach to Unknown Virus Detection in Clinical Samples
Abstract not provided.
Ultra-Strong Light-Matter Interaction with Mid-Infrared Metamaterials
Abstract not provided.
Influence of the Metamaterial Geometry on Ultra-Strong Light-Matter Interaction
Abstract not provided.
Thermal-infrared time-domain spectroscopy system with carrier-envelop phase stabilization
Abstract not provided.