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15 pages, 2333 KB  
Article
Comparative Analysis of Relative Intensity Noise in DBR Single-Frequency Fiber Lasers with Different Output Power
by Yaohui Zhang, Handing Xia, Zefeng Yao, Xiaocheng Tian, Junwen Zheng, Jianbin Li, Fan Zhang and Rui Zhang
Photonics 2026, 13(5), 467; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13050467 - 9 May 2026
Viewed by 188
Abstract
Single-frequency fiber lasers (SFFLs) are essential for applications such as gravitational wave detection, high-precision spectroscopy, and inertial confinement fusion, requiring narrow linewidth, low noise, and high output power. Here, we present a comparative study of 1 μm waveband distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) SFFLs [...] Read more.
Single-frequency fiber lasers (SFFLs) are essential for applications such as gravitational wave detection, high-precision spectroscopy, and inertial confinement fusion, requiring narrow linewidth, low noise, and high output power. Here, we present a comparative study of 1 μm waveband distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) SFFLs with varying cavity parameters. Numerically, we investigate the effects of key cavity parameters on laser performance by plotting contour maps of output power versus grating reflectivity and lasing wavelength. We also simulate intensity noise transfer functions from pump fluctuations. Increasing pump power shifts the relaxation oscillation peak to higher frequency and reduces its amplitude, which originates from the higher intracavity photon density that speeds up the damping of perturbations. Experimentally, we construct two lasers using 6.5 mm and 10.5 mm YDFs spliced between FBG pairs. These lasers employ low-reflectivity FBGs centered at 1053 nm and 1064 nm, with reflectivities of 74% and 55%, respectively. The corresponding maximum output powers are 29.7 mW and 197 mW. The 1053 nm SFFL exhibits a relative intensity noise (RIN) of −102 dBc/Hz at 2.07 MHz, a linewidth of 12.52 kHz, and a mode-hop-free tuning range of 0.64 nm. Although increasing the pump power suppresses the relaxation oscillation peak, it broadens the linewidth due to laser phase noise degradation caused by pump noise-induced temperature fluctuations in the gain fiber. For SFFLs, the output powers should be selected according to the specific application, as a higher output power inherently leads to a broader linewidth. These insights are essential for optimizing such lasers and underscore their strong potential for future applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Lasers, Light Sources and Sensors)
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13 pages, 1627 KB  
Article
Flexible Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) Magnetic Sensor Based on Terfenol-D Grating-Arrayed Thin Polymer Film
by Akeel Qadir, Fayyaz Muhammad, Shahid Karim, Jinkai Chen, Hongsheng Xu and Umar Farooq
Micromachines 2026, 17(5), 537; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17050537 - 28 Apr 2026
Viewed by 271
Abstract
Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) magnetic sensors are traditionally fabricated on rigid substrates, which severely limits their application on curved or irregular surfaces. To address this critical limitation, this paper presents a novel flexible SAW magnetic sensor based on a grating-arrayed Terfenol-D thin film [...] Read more.
Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) magnetic sensors are traditionally fabricated on rigid substrates, which severely limits their application on curved or irregular surfaces. To address this critical limitation, this paper presents a novel flexible SAW magnetic sensor based on a grating-arrayed Terfenol-D thin film deposited on a 50 µm thick flexible lithium niobate (LiNbO3) substrate. Unlike conventional designs using a continuous magnetostrictive layer, the proposed grating-arrayed structure is designed to aid in hysteresis compensation and minimize measurement errors associated with residual magnetization. As demonstrated experimentally, the sensors achieve a high sensitivity of 85.8 kHz/mT for devices with λ-wide gratings and a maximum frequency shift of 377 kHz at 5 mT. A systematic investigation reveals that sensitivity is critically dependent on the grating width and film thickness, with 500 nm thick gratings yielding optimal performance. Crucially, the sensor’s functionality under mechanical deformation is validated, and a differential measurement method is introduced to effectively compensate for stress-induced frequency shifts, ensuring reliable operation in practical, non-ideal conditions. The results confirm the sensor’s robust performance under the tested stress conditions, positioning this flexible SAW magnetic sensor as a promising solution for advanced, conformable sensing applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Surface and Bulk Acoustic Wave Devices, 2nd Edition)
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36 pages, 38341 KB  
Review
Surface Acoustic Wave Devices: New Mechanisms, Enabling Techniques, and Application Frontiers
by Hongsheng Xu, Xiangyu Liu, Weihao Ye, Xiangyu Zeng, Akeel Qadir and Jinkai Chen
Micromachines 2026, 17(4), 494; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17040494 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 509
Abstract
Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) technology, long central to analog signal processing and RF filtering, is undergoing a major renewal. Driven by advances that decouple SAWs from traditional piezoelectric materials and fixed-function devices, the field is gaining unprecedented control over acoustic, optical, and electronic [...] Read more.
Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) technology, long central to analog signal processing and RF filtering, is undergoing a major renewal. Driven by advances that decouple SAWs from traditional piezoelectric materials and fixed-function devices, the field is gaining unprecedented control over acoustic, optical, and electronic interactions at the micro and nanoscale. This review synthesizes these developments across four fronts: new physical mechanisms for SAW manipulation, emerging material platforms, ranging from thin films to 2D systems, along with reconfigurable device architectures and circuits, and the expanding landscape of applications they enable. Optical methods are reshaping how SAWs are generated and controlled, bypassing the limits of conventional electromechanical coupling. Coherent optical excitation of high-Q SAW cavities via Brillouin-like optomechanical interactions now grants access to modes in non-piezoelectric substrates such as diamond and silicon, while on-chip SAW excitation in photonic waveguides through backward stimulated Brillouin scattering opens new integrated sensing routes. In parallel, magneto-acoustic experiments have revealed nonreciprocal SAW diffraction from resonant scattering in magnetoelastic gratings. On the device side, ZnO thin-film transistors integrated on LiNbO3 exploit acoustoelectric coupling to realize voltage-tunable phase shifters; UHF Z-shaped delay lines achieve high sensitivity in a compact footprint; and parametric synthesis of wideband, multi-stage lattice filters targets 5G-class performance. Atomistic simulations show that SAW propagation in 2D MXene films can be engineered via surface terminations, while aerosol jet printing and SAW-assisted particle patterning provide agile, cleanroom-light fabrication of microfluidic and magnetic components. These advances enable applications ranging from hybrid quantum systems and quantum links to lab-on-a-chip particle control, SBS-based and UHF sensing, reconfigurable RF front-ends, and soft robotic actuators based on patterned magnetic composites. At the same time, optical techniques offer non-contact probes of dissipation, and MXenes and other emerging materials open new regimes of acoustic control. Conclusively, they are transforming SAW technology into a versatile, programmable platform for mediating complex interactions in next-generation electronic, photonic, and quantum systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Surface and Bulk Acoustic Wave Devices, 2nd Edition)
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14 pages, 2318 KB  
Article
A Flexible Wearable Data Glove Based on Hybrid Fiber-Optic Sensing for Hand Motion Monitoring
by Jing Li, Xiangting Hou, Ke Du, Huiying Piao and Cheng Li
Materials 2026, 19(8), 1525; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19081525 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 534
Abstract
Wearable data gloves often suffer from electromagnetic interference, insufficient substrate stability, and limited capability for multi-degree-of-freedom motion measurement. To address these limitations, a flexible glove incorporating a hybrid POF-FBG sensing scheme was designed and fabricated. Plastic optical fibers (POFs) were side-polished and patterned [...] Read more.
Wearable data gloves often suffer from electromagnetic interference, insufficient substrate stability, and limited capability for multi-degree-of-freedom motion measurement. To address these limitations, a flexible glove incorporating a hybrid POF-FBG sensing scheme was designed and fabricated. Plastic optical fibers (POFs) were side-polished and patterned with long-period gratings to improve sensitivity to wrist flexion-extension and abduction-adduction. Then fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) were embedded in a polydimethylsiloxane substrate and encapsulated using thermoplastic polyurethane fixtures to reduce the influence of skin stretching and improve measurement accuracy of finger-joint angle. Moreover, a thermoplastic polyurethane skeleton with an adaptive sliding-rail structure was 3D printed to maintain the stability of the sensor placement at the joints. Experimental results demonstrated the mean absolute errors of 4.06°, 1.38° and 1.70° for wrist flexion-extension, abduction-adduction and finger-joint bending, respectively, along with excellent gesture classification using a support vector machine algorithm, which indicates great potential in virtual reality interaction and hand rehabilitation applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Optical Fiber Materials and Their Applications)
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19 pages, 2330 KB  
Article
Mercury: Accelerating 3D Parallel Training with an AWGR-WSS-Based All-Optical Reconfigurable Network
by Shi Feng, Jiawei Zhang, Huitao Zhou, Xingde Li and Yuefeng Ji
Photonics 2026, 13(3), 286; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13030286 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 511
Abstract
The network traffic of 3D parallel training in large-scale deep learning, featuring burstiness, hot-spots, and periodic large-bandwidth patterns, severely challenges network efficiency, necessitating a high-performance and flexible optical network solution. To address this, this paper proposes Mercury, a hybrid optical network based on [...] Read more.
The network traffic of 3D parallel training in large-scale deep learning, featuring burstiness, hot-spots, and periodic large-bandwidth patterns, severely challenges network efficiency, necessitating a high-performance and flexible optical network solution. To address this, this paper proposes Mercury, a hybrid optical network based on physical optical components: its optical timeslot switching (OTS) subnet uses an arrayed waveguide grating router (AWGR) and tunable lasers for dynamic traffic, while the optical circuit switching (OCS) subnet relies on wavelength selective switches (WSSs) for low-latency high-bandwidth transmission, which is coordinated by selective valiant load balancing (S-VLB) and most efficient path configuration (MEPC) mechanisms. Validated via simulations and FPGA-based testbed experiments, Mercury outperforms the Sirius network by reducing epoch training time (e.g., 179s with five jobs) and relieving OTS congestion through offloading large flows to OCS. This work demonstrates that Mercury provides a flexible, high-performance physical optical solution for 3D parallel training of large-scale deep learning models. Full article
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23 pages, 9651 KB  
Article
Numerical Study on the Mechanical Behavior of Composite Segments Cut by a Shield Cutterhead in Metro Connected Aisles
by Yueqiang Duan, Jinghe Wang, Hui Wu, Maolei Wang, Fa Chang, Boyuan Zhang, Yuxiang Guo and Weiyu Sun
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 2828; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16062828 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 373
Abstract
The mechanical method has become a new construction method for connected aisles in metro tunnels due to its advantages of fast construction speed, high safety, and minimal ground disturbance. During the tunneling process, the interaction mechanism between the composite segment and the shield [...] Read more.
The mechanical method has become a new construction method for connected aisles in metro tunnels due to its advantages of fast construction speed, high safety, and minimal ground disturbance. During the tunneling process, the interaction mechanism between the composite segment and the shield cutterhead is complex. Taking Shenzhen Metro Line 8 No. 1 Connected Aisle as the research object, a 3D refined model of the shield cutterhead, composite segments and bolt system were built with Abaqus to investigate their dynamic response under cutting. The Drucker–Prager damage model and contact algorithm were introduced to describe the nonlinear behavior of the cutting process. The reliability of the numerical model was verified by concrete cutting tests and on-site Fiber Bragg Grating monitoring, and good agreements were observed. Results show cutterhead cutting first induces circumferential squeezing, then extends longitudinally with a notable time lag, and longitudinal dynamic response is much stronger than transverse. Affected by cutterhead thrust–rotation coupling, cuttable segments have larger displacement with maximum 0.07 mm, forming an asymmetric deformation zone. Ring joint opening follows “a distal attenuation of the opening amount” rule with maximum 0.018 mm, while bolt stress and displacement show “near-end concentration with gradient attenuation”, with longitudinal bolts being more responsive. Mechanical disturbance from small-shield cutting is minimal, with tunnel segment deformation, joint openings, and bolt stress all remaining well below code-specified allowable values. Numerical results show good agreement with field monitoring data of ring joint openings obtained using Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors, confirming the reliability of the simulation. The results can provide references for structural design and construction parameter optimization of composite segments in a connected aisle. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Tunnel Excavation and Underground Construction)
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8 pages, 480 KB  
Article
Ni- and Co-like Xe Ion EUV Spectra Produced by Excitation Around the Ionisation Threshold of Xe XXVII
by Elmar Träbert
Atoms 2026, 14(3), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/atoms14030024 - 12 Mar 2026
Viewed by 401
Abstract
A high-resolution flat-field grating spectrometer has been employed at the Livermore EBIT-I electron beam ion trap for observations of extreme-uv spectra of Ni-like ions Xe26+ and Co-like ions Xe27+. Multistep ionisation involving the long-lived 3d94s 3D3 [...] Read more.
A high-resolution flat-field grating spectrometer has been employed at the Livermore EBIT-I electron beam ion trap for observations of extreme-uv spectra of Ni-like ions Xe26+ and Co-like ions Xe27+. Multistep ionisation involving the long-lived 3d94s 3D3 level in the Ni-like ion as a stepping stone has a significant influence on the charge state distribution at a given electron beam energy, as has been reported elsewhere. Complementing those observations of 3d-4s E2 and M3 transitions from long-lived levels, the present report shows spectra of 3d-4p and 3d-4f E1 transitions that arise from the decays of short-lived levels in both ions and their neighbouring ions of higher charge states and provide bright reference signals for the changes in the charge state distribution. Their observation is serendipitously furthered by the visual absence of 3d-4d transitions from the observed spectra, although M1 and E2 transitions between these configurations are permitted. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Atomic, Molecular and Nuclear Spectroscopy and Collisions)
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17 pages, 2365 KB  
Article
Guided Ultrasound Horn-Enhanced Fiber Bragg Grating Sensor for Partial Discharge Detection in HV Equipment
by Krishanlal Adhikari, Chiranjib Koley, Nirmal Kumar Roy, Aashish Kumar Bohre and Akshay Kumar Saha
Energies 2026, 19(6), 1429; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19061429 - 12 Mar 2026
Viewed by 2800
Abstract
Insulation deterioration is the leading cause of premature failures in high-voltage (HV) power equipment, with partial discharge (PD) serving as a key indicator of insulation health. This study introduces a novel compact PD sensor assembly that integrates fiber Bragg grating (FBG) with an [...] Read more.
Insulation deterioration is the leading cause of premature failures in high-voltage (HV) power equipment, with partial discharge (PD) serving as a key indicator of insulation health. This study introduces a novel compact PD sensor assembly that integrates fiber Bragg grating (FBG) with an exponential acoustic horn to enhance the sensitivity of PD detection. The horn’s geometry effectively collects ultrasonic emissions from the PD, concentrating the acoustic energy to amplify the force on the FBG located at its focal point. To further enhance signal transduction, the FBG is mounted on a fixed solid structure engineered to resonate at higher ultrasonic frequencies that closely align with the dominant acoustic components generated by PD activity, ensuring improved strain amplification and optimal sensitivity. This results in measurable wavelength shifts, which are used for PD detection. A fiber Bragg grating analyzer interrogates the reflected spectra, providing real-time PD detection during HV operations. The effectiveness of the system was validated against the IEC 60270 standard method using laboratory models that emulated corona and surface discharge. The laboratory experiments demonstrated a significant sensitivity of 2.2 pm/Pa and a favorable signal-to-noise ratio of ~21 dB for the proposed sensor module. The dielectric construction of the sensor module, lightweight design, and resistance to electromagnetic interference make it suitable for harsh HV environments and the long-term condition monitoring of HV power equipment. Full article
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14 pages, 2763 KB  
Article
A Novel Two-Dimensional Hydrophone Based on Fiber Bragg Gratings
by I-Nan Chang, Wei-Chen Li, Chang-Chun Kuo and Wen-Fung Liu
Sensors 2026, 26(5), 1605; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051605 - 4 Mar 2026
Viewed by 513
Abstract
This paper presents a high-sensitivity two-dimensional fiber-optic hydrophone designed for the detection and localization of underwater acoustic sources. The device comprises two sensing heads, each incorporating a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) embedded within a customized 3D-printed encapsulation. To enhance acoustic sensitivity, the design [...] Read more.
This paper presents a high-sensitivity two-dimensional fiber-optic hydrophone designed for the detection and localization of underwater acoustic sources. The device comprises two sensing heads, each incorporating a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) embedded within a customized 3D-printed encapsulation. To enhance acoustic sensitivity, the design utilizes a silicone thin-film coupled with a pyramidal channel that spatially concentrates acoustic energy from the base to the apex, where the FBG is positioned. Incident acoustic pressure induces vibrations in the film, which are amplified by the channel structure, imparting strain on the FBG and resulting in a shift in the Bragg wavelength. The acoustic frequency response is demodulated by converting the overlapping optical power between the sensing and reference gratings into an electrical signal via a photodetector. By arranging the two sensing heads orthogonally, the system effectively determines the direction and angle of the acoustic source. Experimental results show a peak sensitivity of −210.59 dB re 1 V/μPa, with a FWHM of 57.92–66.27 Hz and a figure of merit (FOM) up to 3.64 dB/Hz. In addition, the acoustic-field SNR is approximately 26 dB in the dominant band, and the LOD is 64.19 dB re 1 μPa (10–400 Hz). Experimental validation confirms the hydrophone’s high sensitivity and localization accuracy, demonstrating its significant potential for underwater acoustic sensing applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fiber Optic Sensing and Applications)
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11 pages, 2679 KB  
Article
Power-Scaled Mode-Locked Femtosecond Pulses from an All-Polarization-Maintaining Tm-Doped Figure-9 Fiber Laser
by Mingrui Jiang, Ting Wen, Yuhang Wei, Liang Zhao, Senyu Wang, Jinlong Wan, Hongyu Luo and Jianfeng Li
Photonics 2026, 13(3), 245; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13030245 - 2 Mar 2026
Viewed by 620
Abstract
We demonstrate an all-polarization-maintaining (PM) mode-locked thulium-doped fiber laser operating in the net-normal-dispersion regime based on a figure-9 nonlinear amplifying loop mirror (NALM) configuration. A chirped fiber Bragg grating (CFBG) and a commercial PM dispersion-compensating fiber (PM-DCF) are incorporated into the figure-9 cavity, [...] Read more.
We demonstrate an all-polarization-maintaining (PM) mode-locked thulium-doped fiber laser operating in the net-normal-dispersion regime based on a figure-9 nonlinear amplifying loop mirror (NALM) configuration. A chirped fiber Bragg grating (CFBG) and a commercial PM dispersion-compensating fiber (PM-DCF) are incorporated into the figure-9 cavity, providing a large normal net dispersion and enabling stable dissipative-soliton mode-locking. Under stable dissipative-soliton operation, the laser delivers a maximum output power of 53.6 mW at a repetition rate of 12.31 MHz, corresponding to a pulse energy of 4.3 nJ. The output spectrum has a central wavelength of ~1952 nm with a 3 dB bandwidth of ~11 nm. The all-PM laser oscillator directly generates a fs pulse without extra-cavity compression, achieving a pulse duration of 545 fs at the CFBG arm. Moreover, stable fundamental mode-locking is verified by a high radio-frequency signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) exceeding 82 dB and a long-term root-mean-square (RMS) power fluctuation of 0.45% over two hours. To the best of our knowledge, this represents the highest output power generated from an all-PM-fiber figure-9 laser oscillator in the 2 μm band, alongside fs-pulse operation. This high-power, compact, stable and environment-insensitive fs-pulsed laser source shows great potential as an ideal seed for biomedical imaging and mid-infrared frequency combs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Lasers, Light Sources and Sensors)
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14 pages, 4032 KB  
Article
An 850 nm Grating Coupler on Thin-Film Lithium Niobate Enabled by Topological Unidirectional Guided Resonance
by Yuan Fan, Haihua Yu, Hao Yu, Haoran Wang, Yi Zuo and Chao Peng
Photonics 2026, 13(2), 199; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13020199 - 17 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1032
Abstract
The inherently high-voltage-length product (VπL) of thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) modulators in the O-, C-, and L-telecom bands restricts further scaling of photonic integrated circuits’ bandwidth density, driving their migration toward shorter operating wavelengths. Nevertheless, the corresponding grating couplers, [...] Read more.
The inherently high-voltage-length product (VπL) of thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) modulators in the O-, C-, and L-telecom bands restricts further scaling of photonic integrated circuits’ bandwidth density, driving their migration toward shorter operating wavelengths. Nevertheless, the corresponding grating couplers, as critical optical input/outputs (optical I/Os) interfaces, remain largely undeveloped. Here, we demonstrate an 850 nm TFLN grating coupler designed based on topological unidirectional guided resonance (UGR). By breaking C2 symmetry of the unit cell and precisely tailoring its geometry, we achieve unidirectional upward radiation with a 63.7 dB up/down intensity ratio. Subsequent apodization of groove widths and periods enables precise control of the electrical field distribution in both real and momentum spaces. This yields a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL)-matched, highly fabrication-tolerant TFLN grating coupler that attains, to the best of our knowledge, the highest simulated coupling efficiency of −0.6 dB without mirrors or hybrid materials. This work delivers a high-efficiency, layout-flexible, and complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible optical I/Os solution for short-wavelength TFLN modulators with low VπL. It offers substantial engineering value and broad applicability for on-chip light source integration and high-bandwidth-density short-reach optical interconnects. Full article
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23 pages, 41766 KB  
Article
A Configuration Optimization Method Based on Decoupled Recursive Strategy for Distributed UAV SAR 3D Imaging System
by Chaodong Wang, Die Hu, Zhongyu Li, Hongyang An, Zhichao Sun, Junjie Wu and Jianyu Yang
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(4), 625; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18040625 - 17 Feb 2026
Viewed by 408
Abstract
Compared with conventional synthetic aperture radar (SAR) three-dimensional (3D) imaging systems, distributed unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) SAR systems offer enhanced flexibility and single-pass capability, enabling rapid 3D imaging. Their performance, however, critically depends on the spatial arrangement of UAVs. Improper configurations result in [...] Read more.
Compared with conventional synthetic aperture radar (SAR) three-dimensional (3D) imaging systems, distributed unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) SAR systems offer enhanced flexibility and single-pass capability, enabling rapid 3D imaging. Their performance, however, critically depends on the spatial arrangement of UAVs. Improper configurations result in grating lobes and increase the sidelobe level, thereby degrading elevation reconstruction. Additionally, the coordinated operation of distributed UAVs imposes spatial constraints such as safety separation. To address these challenges, this paper formulates the configuration design as a multi-constraint, multi-objective optimization problem that simultaneously considers both imaging performance and operational feasibility. Based on compressive sensing (CS) theory, the influence of configuration on sparse imaging is analyzed, and practical constraints are integrated, including 3D span limits, safety separation, and mainlobe avoidance. A joint optimization model is established to minimize the cumulative coherence of the sensing matrix while maximizing system spatial compactness. To efficiently solve this high-dimensional problem, a decoupled recursive strategy is proposed. In the first stage, a hybrid algorithm combining particle swarm optimization (PSO) and covariance matrix adaptation evolution strategy (CMA-ES) performs global optimization in the baseline domain. In the second stage, a compact configuration is constructed within the feasible region via analytical spatial recursion. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach effectively reduces sensing matrix coherence and improves 3D reconstruction quality. Full article
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21 pages, 5269 KB  
Article
A Novel Ambiguity Resolution Method for Array Signals via Wavefront Modulation
by Yuhui Lei, Fubo Zhang, Wenjie Li, Yihao Xu, Longyong Chen and Shuo Liu
Electronics 2026, 15(4), 824; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15040824 - 14 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 483
Abstract
Aimed at the elevation ambiguity problem in array synthetic aperture radar (SAR) three-dimensional imaging, this paper proposes a novel ambiguity-resolving method based on wavefront modulation. By introducing measured plasma lens modulation phases and constructing an array SAR signal echo model incorporating wavefront modulation, [...] Read more.
Aimed at the elevation ambiguity problem in array synthetic aperture radar (SAR) three-dimensional imaging, this paper proposes a novel ambiguity-resolving method based on wavefront modulation. By introducing measured plasma lens modulation phases and constructing an array SAR signal echo model incorporating wavefront modulation, the method effectively overcomes the physical size limitations of traditional array antennas. Theoretical analysis demonstrates that wavefront modulation significantly reduces the grating lobe level of the array pattern, equivalently increasing the number of array channels and thereby shortening the shortest baseline length, which enhances the system’s maximum unambiguous height. At the signal processing level, an observation equation based on compressed sensing is established, and target reconstruction is achieved using the Orthogonal Matching Pursuit (OMP) algorithm. Monte Carlo simulation results indicate that under the same signal-to-noise ratio conditions, when the observation range is extended to twice the theoretical maximum unambiguous height, the proposed method maintains a reconstruction success rate of over 95%, whereas the traditional method’s reconstruction success rate drops rapidly below 40% once the maximum unambiguous range is exceeded. This study also investigates the 3D reconstruction of spatial point targets and a rectangular building, with the analysis of their theoretical ambiguous positions confirming the method’s effectiveness in suppressing ambiguous targets in the vicinity of spatial point targets as well as in front of and behind the structure. This study provides a new technical approach to overcoming antenna size constraints on airborne platforms, with significant application value in fields such as digital elevation model construction and urban 3D imaging. Full article
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24 pages, 8367 KB  
Article
Hybrid Plasmonic–Photonic Panda-Ring Antenna Embedded with a Gold Grating for Dual-Mode Transmission
by Sirigiet Phunklang, Atawit Jantaupalee, Patawee Mesawad, Preecha Yupapin and Piyaporn Krachodnok
Technologies 2026, 14(2), 113; https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies14020113 - 11 Feb 2026
Viewed by 835
Abstract
This paper presents a systematic numerical investigation of a hybrid plasmonic–photonic Panda-ring antenna with an embedded gold grating, designed to enable efficient dual-mode radiation for optical and terahertz communication systems. The proposed structure integrates high-Q whispering-gallery mode (WGM) confinement in a multi-ring dielectric [...] Read more.
This paper presents a systematic numerical investigation of a hybrid plasmonic–photonic Panda-ring antenna with an embedded gold grating, designed to enable efficient dual-mode radiation for optical and terahertz communication systems. The proposed structure integrates high-Q whispering-gallery mode (WGM) confinement in a multi-ring dielectric resonator with plasmonic out-coupling at the metal–dielectric interface, allowing controlled conversion of resonantly stored photonic energy into free-space radiation. The electromagnetic behavior is analyzed through a hierarchical structural evolution, progressing from a linear silicon waveguide to single-ring, add–drop, and Panda-ring resonator configurations. Gold is modeled using a dispersive Drude formulation with complex permittivity to accurately capture frequency-dependent plasmonic response at 1.55 µm. Power redistribution within the resonator system is described using coupled-mode theory, with coupling and loss parameters evaluated consistently from full-wave numerical simulations. Full-wave simulations using OptiFDTD and CST Studio Suite demonstrate that purely photonic resonators exhibit strong WGM confinement but negligible radiation, while plasmonic gratings alone suffer from low efficiency due to the absence of coherent photonic excitation. In contrast, the proposed hybrid Panda-ring antenna achieves stable and directive far-field radiation under WGM excitation, with a realized gain of approximately 8.05 dBi at 193.5 THz. The performance enhancement originates from synergistic hybrid SPP–WGM coupling, establishing a WGM-driven radiation mechanism suitable for Li-Fi and terahertz wireless applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Information and Communication Technologies)
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7 pages, 1027 KB  
Article
Double-Staggered Grating Waveguide Slow Wave Structure for Terahertz Traveling Wave Tube
by Muhammad Haris Jamil, Nazish Saleem Abbas, Hamid Sharif and Wenlong He
Micromachines 2026, 17(2), 195; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17020195 - 31 Jan 2026
Viewed by 451
Abstract
A double-staggered grating waveguide slow wave structure (DSGW–SWS) is designed for a 340 GHz traveling wave tube (TWT). Input and output couplers were also designed to isolate the electron beam source from the electromagnetic (EM) signal. Transition sections in the SWS circuits were [...] Read more.
A double-staggered grating waveguide slow wave structure (DSGW–SWS) is designed for a 340 GHz traveling wave tube (TWT). Input and output couplers were also designed to isolate the electron beam source from the electromagnetic (EM) signal. Transition sections in the SWS circuits were made by tapering the height of the DSWG to improve the matching of the circuit with the couplers. The reflection coefficient has a wide range from 326 GHz to 364 GHz below −15 dB. Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation is performed using an ideal particle source for sheet electron beam (SEB), considering the filling factor to be around 50%. The average input power of a 340 GHz signal is said to be 0.19 W, which is amplified to 17.4 W with a gain of 19.55 dB. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Vacuum Nanoelectronics)
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