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25 pages, 3533 KB  
Article
Ultrasensitive Hydrogen Detection Using GNRFET Sensor: Multimetric Optimization via Geometry, Temperature, and Oxygen Environment
by Mohammad K. Anvarifard and Zeinab Ramezani
Micromachines 2026, 17(5), 632; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17050632 - 21 May 2026
Viewed by 129
Abstract
This work presents a comprehensive analysis of a Palladium (Pd)-gated graphene nanoribbon field-effect transistor (GNRFET) as a high-sensitivity potential hydrogen sensor under idealized conditions, focusing on the structural and environmental control of multimetric sensitivity. Hydrogen adsorption is modeled through pressure-dependent work-function modulation and [...] Read more.
This work presents a comprehensive analysis of a Palladium (Pd)-gated graphene nanoribbon field-effect transistor (GNRFET) as a high-sensitivity potential hydrogen sensor under idealized conditions, focusing on the structural and environmental control of multimetric sensitivity. Hydrogen adsorption is modeled through pressure-dependent work-function modulation and interface coverage, including competition with oxygen. For hydrogen gas at a pressure of PH2=106 Torr without O2, the sensor exhibits a maximum threshold voltage sensitivity of about 300 mV, which is reduced to roughly 40 mV under an oxygen partial pressure of 152 Torr, quantifying the impact of background gas on response. Band diagrams, transmission spectra, local density of states, and transfer characteristics are examined over wide ranges of H2 pressure, temperature, gate length, and nanoribbon width. Sensitivity is evaluated using drain current change, threshold voltage shift, and average subthreshold swing variation. Results showed that the sensitivity based on current is high for ultralow hydrogen pressures, whereas it is low in higher levels of pressure compared to the sensitivity based on subthreshold. Also, uncertainty analysis revealed that the threshold voltage metric remains largely geometry-independent and thus tolerant to fabrication variations. Full article
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23 pages, 5342 KB  
Article
A High-Performance Ultraviolet Optical Sensing System for Rotating Detonation Extreme Combustion
by Wen Dai, Yingchen Shi, Junhui Ma, Mingyang Bu, Lingxue Wang, Qiaofeng Xie, Haocheng Wen and Bing Wang
Sensors 2026, 26(10), 3248; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26103248 - 20 May 2026
Viewed by 212
Abstract
Extreme combustion features strong unsteadiness, heterogeneity and multi-physics coupling, which is of great significance for advanced propulsion systems. High-performance sensing of such extreme combustion flow fields is critical to revealing physical mechanisms and capturing fine flow structures. However, it faces severe challenges: rich [...] Read more.
Extreme combustion features strong unsteadiness, heterogeneity and multi-physics coupling, which is of great significance for advanced propulsion systems. High-performance sensing of such extreme combustion flow fields is critical to revealing physical mechanisms and capturing fine flow structures. However, it faces severe challenges: rich multi-band spectral characteristics require multi-spectral observation; ultra-transient processes demand high-frequency imaging; and high-performance photoelectric enhancement is necessary under short gate width and high frame rates. To solve these problems, this study developed a high-performance ultraviolet optical sensing system (HUOSS), which achieves megahertz-level imaging at a 1608 × 1104 full-frame resolution and provides a 107 electron gain in the ultraviolet band. The HUOSS has been applied to chemiluminescence sensing of a hydrogen/ammonia-air rotating detonation as a representative extreme combustion system. Based on the analysis of representative influencing factors (e.g., the transmission characteristic of the bandpass filter and the intensifier gate width) in the HUOSS, the filter transmission loss and its influence on the gate width settings have been revealed. From the chemiluminescence sensing images captured in the experiments, the fine structure and evolution of detonation waves have been clearly identified, verifying the high-speed imaging capability. Furthermore, simultaneous OH* and NH* multi-spectral observation has been realized, and the effects of ammonia addition have been analyzed, validating the multi-spectral diagnostic capacity of the system. This study provides an effective diagnostic method for extreme transient combustion research, and comprehensively verified the multi-spectral, extremely transient and high signal-to-noise ratio sensing capabilities of this system. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sensing and Imaging)
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23 pages, 3698 KB  
Article
Design of a Thin-Film Lithium Niobate Electro-Optic Modulator with Three-Dimensional L-Shaped Traveling-Wave Electrodes
by Yingbo Liu, Haiou Li, Yue Li, Yuxiang Hao and Liangpeng Qin
Photonics 2026, 13(5), 502; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13050502 - 19 May 2026
Viewed by 338
Abstract
The systematic influence of signal electrode width on electro-optic bandwidth and insertion loss in L-type traveling-wave lithium niobate modulators has not yet been comprehensively quantified, limiting the parametric engineering design of this device configuration. This study presents a full-band systematic simulation sweep of [...] Read more.
The systematic influence of signal electrode width on electro-optic bandwidth and insertion loss in L-type traveling-wave lithium niobate modulators has not yet been comprehensively quantified, limiting the parametric engineering design of this device configuration. This study presents a full-band systematic simulation sweep of signal electrode width and three auxiliary geometric parameters in an L-type traveling-wave lithium niobate Mach–Zehnder modulator, combined with optical mode simulation to establish joint microwave–optical optimization constraints. The study reveals the coupled modulating effect of signal electrode width on characteristic impedance, velocity mismatch, and transmission loss; it elucidates the competition mechanism underlying non-monotonic high-frequency loss behavior; and it identifies the complete impedance-neutral characteristic of the electrode–waveguide contact width as an independent loss-tuning degree of freedom decoupled from the impedance constraint. Full-system validation confirms that the final design simultaneously satisfies broadband impedance matching, low insertion loss, and high electro-optic bandwidth. The results are distilled into four quantitative design rules that provide simulation-driven guidance directly applicable to the engineering design of L-type thin-film lithium niobate modulators, advancing the systematic establishment of a parametric design methodology for this device configuration. Full article
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19 pages, 599 KB  
Article
Surface Phonon Polariton-Quantum Dot Coupling in One-Dimensional Periodic Microstructures for Batch Quantum State Manipulation
by Xinhua Zhang, Yuchun Liu, Xinyue Zhang, Lingchen Kong, Cuihong Jin, Yajuan Han, Mengqing Jiang, Shiying Qiao and Xinyan Gong
Photonics 2026, 13(5), 480; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13050480 - 12 May 2026
Viewed by 295
Abstract
To explore the strong coupling between surface phonon polaritons (SPhPs) and quantum dots in one-dimensional periodic microstructures for quantum information processing, we establish a comprehensive theoretical model for SPhPs at air–polar dielectric interfaces. By rigorously deriving the dispersion relations, we reveal the decisive [...] Read more.
To explore the strong coupling between surface phonon polaritons (SPhPs) and quantum dots in one-dimensional periodic microstructures for quantum information processing, we establish a comprehensive theoretical model for SPhPs at air–polar dielectric interfaces. By rigorously deriving the dispersion relations, we reveal the decisive role of scale effects on bandgap formation: continuous spectra without bandgaps emerge at the nanoscale (d10–100 nm), whereas periodic modulation induces significant Bloch mode folding and tunable bandgaps (0.5–5 μm width) at the microscale (d1–10 μm). Based on Fourier bandwidth limitations, we determine optimal channel widths (Ly10 μm) for maintaining low-loss modes with energy deviations below 1%. Through electromagnetic field quantization, we obtain analytical expressions for SPhP mode amplitudes and quantum dot transition rates. Calculations demonstrate that in micrometer-scale CsI structures, spontaneous emission rates can be modulated significantly: suppressed to <0.1 times the free-space values within bandgaps (excited-state lifetimes extended to ∼10 ns) and enhanced 5–8 times at conduction band edges. Leveraging these characteristics, we propose a scheme for batch quantum state manipulation of 102103 arrayed quantum dots via selective excitation of specific Bloch modes using controlled laser frequency and angle, enabling parallel single-qubit gates with theoretical fidelity > 99%. Compared with surface plasmon polariton schemes, our approach utilizes the low-loss infrared characteristics of SPhPs (Q100–1000, 1–2 orders higher) to reduce decoherence rates, offering a new pathway for room-temperature solid-state quantum computing and on-chip multi-node entanglement distribution. Full article
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23 pages, 1476 KB  
Article
Multilayer Residual Perceptron as a Surrogate Model in Optimising the Geometry of a Periodic Beam
by Łukasz Doliński, Wiktor Waszkowiak, Paweł Kowalski and Arkadiusz Żak
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(9), 4412; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16094412 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 214
Abstract
The paper presents an optimisation workflow for modelling of a periodic mechanical structure in the form of a multi-material, axisymmetric beam. The optimisation objective is to prescribe the positions and widths of selected band gaps within a target frequency range for three basic [...] Read more.
The paper presents an optimisation workflow for modelling of a periodic mechanical structure in the form of a multi-material, axisymmetric beam. The optimisation objective is to prescribe the positions and widths of selected band gaps within a target frequency range for three basic types of structural vibrations: flexural, longitudinal and torsional. The decision variables were geometric parameters of the unit cell and material properties of selected thermoplastics assigned to successive segments of the cell. The frequency characteristics of the beam were determined using the time-domain spectral finite-element method (TD-SFEM). This model was used to perform a sensitivity analysis using the Morris method, which showed the dominant influence of the beam geometry on the position and width of band gaps, with a relatively smaller role of material variability. Due to high computational costs of the global optimisation based on a FEM solver, a surrogate regression model in the form of a residual MLP network was developed to predict the positions and widths of the first five band gaps for each vibration type. The global search was carried out using a genetic algorithm (GA) with the surrogate model and then the results were refined using a deterministic goal-attainment method with a high-fidelity model. Full article
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24 pages, 9898 KB  
Article
Evaluation Method of the Band Saw Blade Wear State Based on Current Signals
by Dongliang Li, Bing Chen, Jiahao Fu, Zihao Liu, Junchang Liu, Wenchu Ou and Guoyue Liu
Materials 2026, 19(9), 1853; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19091853 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 248
Abstract
The band saw blade is distinguished by its multi-point and flexible cutting capability when sawing materials. Its wear form is significantly more intricate than that of traditional cutting tools, such as the lathe tool and the milling cutter. Preliminary experimental observations suggest a [...] Read more.
The band saw blade is distinguished by its multi-point and flexible cutting capability when sawing materials. Its wear form is significantly more intricate than that of traditional cutting tools, such as the lathe tool and the milling cutter. Preliminary experimental observations suggest a close correlation between the wear of band saw blades and the motor current of the driving wheel. Therefore, this study evaluates the wear condition of band saw blades using current signals. A mathematical correlation model was established between the driving wheel motor current signals and the load on the band saw. A comprehensive experimental study was conducted on the band saw blade, encompassing the entire lifecycle of sawing operations. The average wear width of the tooth tip was utilized as an indicator of tooth wear, and an investigation was conducted into the correlation between the driving wheel motor current signals and the wear state. The findings indicated that the driving wheel motor current signals could be utilized to assess the blade wear state with high precision, which would facilitate proactive maintenance and replacement strategies to optimize band saw performance and service life. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cutting Processes for Materials in Manufacturing—Second Edition)
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14 pages, 5301 KB  
Article
Reinforcement Learning-Based Optimization of Ku-Band Low-Noise Amplifier
by Jiyong Chung, Hoyeon Shin, Seonho Shin, Yeonggi Kim, Saeed Zeinolabedinzadeh, Dongjin Ji and Ickhyun Song
Micromachines 2026, 17(5), 554; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17050554 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 332
Abstract
In this paper, we present a study on the automated design optimization of a wideband low-noise amplifier (LNA) operating in Ku-band (12 to 18 GHz) using proximal policy optimization (PPO), one of the widely applied reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms for engineering problems. As [...] Read more.
In this paper, we present a study on the automated design optimization of a wideband low-noise amplifier (LNA) operating in Ku-band (12 to 18 GHz) using proximal policy optimization (PPO), one of the widely applied reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms for engineering problems. As a target microwave active circuit, we select a two-stage LNA architecture, where transmission lines (TLs) are dominantly used for impedance matching and gain/noise optimization. For simplicity, all widths of TLs were fixed so that the characteristic impedance is 50 Ω, with lengths of TLs being set as design parameters. In addition, dimension variables of capacitors were treated as design parameters and, in total, we optimized 29 parameters. For target specifications, we set both S11 and S22 to be below −10 dB over the 12–18 GHz band and the noise figure (NF) to be below 2 dB. A total of 20,140 simulations were performed for training and the overall process took about 24 h. The results show that both the reward and the loss converged appropriately, achieving the target specifications successfully. For the final results, we performed up to 25 predictions, and the prediction process was terminated early if a solution meeting all target specifications was found within the given number of attempts. The device model used was a commercial 150 nm GaN high-electron-mobility transistor (HEMT) process technology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Electromagnetic Devices, 2nd Edition)
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19 pages, 7366 KB  
Article
A High-Speed Scalable 3D GPR Platform for Urban Road Infrastructure Assessment
by Liang Fang, Feng Yang, Maoxuan Xu and Junli Nie
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(4), 219; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10040219 - 21 Apr 2026
Viewed by 402
Abstract
The rapid inspection of urban road hazards, such as subsurface voids and pipeline damage, demands high efficiency and precision in detection technology. Conventional Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) systems often face limitations in urban environments, including slow survey speeds, poor channel scalability, and the [...] Read more.
The rapid inspection of urban road hazards, such as subsurface voids and pipeline damage, demands high efficiency and precision in detection technology. Conventional Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) systems often face limitations in urban environments, including slow survey speeds, poor channel scalability, and the trade-off between shallow resolution and deep penetration. The proposed system integrates a dual-band antenna array (200 MHz and 400 MHz) to resolve the classical resolution–penetration trade-off, simultaneously capturing high-resolution shallow data and achieving deep subsurface penetration in a single pass. To overcome the sampling rate bottleneck inherent in low-cost microcontrollers, a custom Time-Division Step Multiplexing (TDSM) protocol extends the equivalent sampling period to 0.38 µs across 24 parallel channels while maintaining a 200 kHz pulse repetition rate—enabling real-time data streaming at vehicle speeds up to 70 km/h with 5 cm trace spacing. This capability directly addresses the critical challenge of traffic disruption on urban arterials caused by conventional slow-speed GPR surveys. Complementing this, a master-slave FPGA-MCU hierarchical architecture provides seamless channel scalability from 24 to 36 channels, adapting to diverse swath width requirements without hardware redesign. Laboratory physics model experiments demonstrate a penetration depth exceeding 3 m after convolutional sparse fusion of the dual-band data, covering the typical burial depth of urban utilities. This study provides a deployable high-resolution underground detection solution for rapid urban infrastructure surveys and emergency disease detection by breaking the traditional constraints of channel number, sampling rate, and detection speed, significantly reducing interference with urban main traffic. Full article
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66 pages, 5999 KB  
Article
Copy-Time Geometry from Gauge-Coded Quantum Cellular Automata: Emergent Gravity and a Golden Relation for Singlet-Scalar Dark Matter
by Mohamed Sacha
Quantum Rep. 2026, 8(2), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum8020033 - 13 Apr 2026
Viewed by 1817
Abstract
We formulate the Quantum Information Copy Time (QICT) framework for conserved charges under strictly local quantum dynamics and isolate its logically strongest consequence. The theorem-level core is a receiver-optimised variational speed-limit inequality: after projection away from the conserved zero mode, the copy time [...] Read more.
We formulate the Quantum Information Copy Time (QICT) framework for conserved charges under strictly local quantum dynamics and isolate its logically strongest consequence. The theorem-level core is a receiver-optimised variational speed-limit inequality: after projection away from the conserved zero mode, the copy time is bounded from below by the inverse square root of a Liouvillian-squared receiver susceptibility times a local encoding seminorm. This statement is written in a finite-volume operator framework and does not require a diffusive ansatz. We then examine what follows only after additional infrared assumptions. Under a single diffusive slow-mode hypothesis, the variational inequality reduces to the practical scaling relation used in the benchmark computations. That reduction is treated as conditional and is stress-tested numerically rather than promoted by rhetoric. Within the anomaly-free Abelian span relevant for one Standard-Model-like generation, hypercharge selection is elevated to theorem-level status; by contrast, minimal gauge-algebra uniqueness remains explicitly conditional on additional model-selection axioms. The remainder of the manuscript is organised as an explicitly documented closure programme built on top of this core. In that closure, a gauge-coded QCA construction, a microscopic benchmark for the transport normalisation, and an electroweak matching convention are combined to produce a resonance-centred Higgs-portal singlet-scalar mass band together with direct-detection, invisible-width, and relic-consistency checks. These latter results are presented as model-dependent consequences of an explicit closure ansatz rather than as deductions from locality alone. Full article
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39 pages, 29473 KB  
Article
Application of High-Pressure Water-Jet Slotting and Pre-Cracked Weakening Belt Technology in Gob-Side Entry Retaining for Roof Cutting and Pressure Relief
by Dong Duan, Jingbo Wang, Jie Li, Xiaojing Feng, Jian Zhang, Haolin Guo and Quandong Wang
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(8), 3729; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16083729 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 319
Abstract
To address the difficulty of directionally cutting thick, hard key strata in gob-side entry retaining using conventional blasting or hydraulic fracturing, this paper proposes a high-pressure water-jet slotting-induced pre-cracked weakening belt (PCWB) roof-cutting technology. Several finite-length PCWBs are arranged within the key stratum [...] Read more.
To address the difficulty of directionally cutting thick, hard key strata in gob-side entry retaining using conventional blasting or hydraulic fracturing, this paper proposes a high-pressure water-jet slotting-induced pre-cracked weakening belt (PCWB) roof-cutting technology. Several finite-length PCWBs are arranged within the key stratum and designed to coalesce into a plane, inducing through-going roof failure along a pre-determined path. A fixed–fixed key strata beam model combined with linear elastic fracture mechanics shows that the double-belt configuration forces the bending moment and shear force to concentrate in a thin rock bridge, where bending and shear stresses are amplified by about 1.5–2.8 times and 1.2–1.7 times, respectively, for 2–4 m thick key strata, providing a mechanical basis for preferential tensile–shear failure. Two-dimensional RFPA2D simulations reveal “width-dominated, length-assisted” control of cutting performance and identify an optimal weakening belt geometry of about 400 mm in width and 200 mm in length. Three-dimensional numerical modeling of parallel slot pairs indicates that intra-pair spacing of about 40 mm produces a continuous, directional weakening belt, whereas smaller or larger spacing causes, respectively, destructive interference or loss of connectivity. High-pressure water-jet tests (320 MPa, 0.33 mm nozzle, 1.30 mm/s traverse speed) on limestone blocks confirm that single slots can penetrate the full thickness and that cracks from adjacent slots coalesce through the rock bridge, forming a wide, straight fracture band. Field application in the Dongjiang Mine (3.5 m limestone key stratum, ~400 m depth) shows that the first weighting is advanced from the 7th to the 3rd day, peak support resistance is reduced from 8.8 to 7.4 MPa, and periodic weighting becomes more frequent and smoother. The PCWB technology is therefore suitable for panels with 2–4 m thick hard key strata at similar depths, offering precise key stratum severance, active stress relief, and safe, controllable construction. Full article
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13 pages, 3440 KB  
Article
High-Power, Low-Divergence, Single Cross-Sectional-Mode 795 nm Semiconductor Laser Based on Photonic Crystal Epitaxy
by Bingqi Hou, Yufei Wang, Aiyi Qi, Yang Chen, Ziyuan Liao, Xuyan Zhou and Wanhua Zheng
Photonics 2026, 13(4), 357; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13040357 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 349
Abstract
The 795 nm wavelength corresponds to the D1 transition of rubidium atoms and is widely used in atomic optical pumping, atomic clocks, magnetometers, and precision spectroscopy. For compact free-space collimation, beam shaping, and efficient fiber coupling, edge-emitting semiconductor lasers with reduced fast-axis (vertical) [...] Read more.
The 795 nm wavelength corresponds to the D1 transition of rubidium atoms and is widely used in atomic optical pumping, atomic clocks, magnetometers, and precision spectroscopy. For compact free-space collimation, beam shaping, and efficient fiber coupling, edge-emitting semiconductor lasers with reduced fast-axis (vertical) divergence are highly desirable, yet low-divergence designs at 795 nm remain limited. Here, we propose and demonstrate low-divergence photonic-crystal epitaxy (LD–PC) for 795 nm edge-emitting lasers. By engineering a periodic n-side photonic-crystal stack to place the fundamental vertical mode near the photonic band edge, the vertical mode is expanded while maintaining effective modal discrimination. Narrow-ridge Fabry–Pérot lasers based on GaAsP/AlGaAs single-quantum-well epitaxy were fabricated and characterized. The optimized LD–PC device (3 μm ridge width, 1 mm cavity length) delivers 227 mW at 200 mA with a threshold current of 23 mA, a slope efficiency of 1.28 W/A, and a peak wall-plug efficiency of 55% under continuous-wave operation at 25 °C. The measured far-field divergences (FWHMs) are 7.16° and 18.83° in the lateral and vertical directions, respectively, corresponding to a reduction in the vertical divergence from >40° in the reference structure to <20° with LD–PC. These results validate photonic-crystal epitaxy as an effective route toward compact, high-performance, low-divergence 795 nm semiconductor laser sources for rubidium-based atomic systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Lasers, Light Sources and Sensors)
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21 pages, 26584 KB  
Article
Connecting Meteorite Spectra to Lunar Surface Composition Using Hyperspectral Imaging and Machine Learning
by Fatemeh Fazel Hesar, Mojtaba Raouf, Amirmohammad Chegeni, Peyman Soltani, Bernard Foing, Elias Chatzitheodoridis, Michiel J. A. de Dood and Fons J. Verbeek
Universe 2026, 12(4), 93; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe12040093 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 463
Abstract
We present an innovative, cost-effective framework integrating laboratory Hyperspectral Imaging (HSI) of the Bechar 010 Lunar meteorite with ground-based lunar HSI and supervised Machine Learning (ML) to generate high-fidelity mineralogical maps. A 3 mm thin section of Bechar 010 was imaged under a [...] Read more.
We present an innovative, cost-effective framework integrating laboratory Hyperspectral Imaging (HSI) of the Bechar 010 Lunar meteorite with ground-based lunar HSI and supervised Machine Learning (ML) to generate high-fidelity mineralogical maps. A 3 mm thin section of Bechar 010 was imaged under a microscope with a 30 mm focal length lens at 150 mm working distance, using 6x binning to increase the signal-to-noise ratio, producing a data cube (X × Y × λ = 791×1024×224, 0.24 mm × 0.2 mm resolution) across 400 nm to 1000 nm (224 bands, 2.7 nm spectral sampling, 5.5 nm full width at half maximum spectral resolution) using a Specim FX10 camera. Ground-based lunar HSI was captured with a Celestron 8SE telescope (3 km/pixel), yielded a data cube (371×1024×224). Solar calibration was performed using a Spectralon reference (99% reflectance < 2% error) ensured accurate reflectance spectra. A Support Vector Machine (SVM) with a radial basis function kernel, trained on expert-labeled spectra, achieved 93.7% classification accuracy (5-fold cross-validation) for olivine (92% precision, 90% recall) and pyroxene (88% precision, 86% recall) in Bechar 010. LIME analysis identified key wavelengths (e.g., 485 nm, 22.4% for M3; 715 nm, 20.6% for M6) across 10 pre-selected regions (M1 to M10), indicating olivine-rich (Highland-like) and pyroxene-rich (Mare-like) compositions. SAM analysis revealed angles from 0.26 rad to 0.66 rad, linking M3 and M9 to Highlands and M6 and M10 to Mares. K-means clustering of Lunar data identified 10 mineralogical clusters (88% accuracy), validated against Chandrayaan-1 Moon mineralogy Mapper (M3) data (140 m/pixel, 10 nm spectral resolution). A novel push-broom HSI approach with a telescope achieves 0.8 arcsec resolution for lunar spectroscopy, inspiring full-sky multi-object spectral mapping. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Planetary Sciences)
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22 pages, 4655 KB  
Article
Photonic Crystal-Based Ultra-Wideband Bow-Tie Antenna for High-Gain and THz Frequency-Dependent Beam Scanning
by Aicha Gherbi, Idris Messaoudene, Khalida Khodja, Abdallah Hedir, Massinissa Belazzoug, Choumeyssa Chennouf and Salim Atia
Photonics 2026, 13(4), 312; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13040312 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 603
Abstract
One of the strongest electromagnetic engineering approaches for enhancing antenna performance is the use of photonic crystal (PhC) substrates. This technique can be efficiently applied to antenna design and offers notable advantages, such as gain improvement, increased bandwidth, and frequency-dependent beam scanning. In [...] Read more.
One of the strongest electromagnetic engineering approaches for enhancing antenna performance is the use of photonic crystal (PhC) substrates. This technique can be efficiently applied to antenna design and offers notable advantages, such as gain improvement, increased bandwidth, and frequency-dependent beam scanning. In this paper, a bow-tie dipole antenna has been developed for terahertz operation over the 0.39–1.3 THz band, presenting a novel structure capable of producing strong ultra-wideband (UWB) field enhancement within its feed gap. The feed gap between the two metallic arms has a slot width of 1.24 λ0 (λ0 is the wavelength in free space at a center range of 0.8 THz), which facilitates the generation of an enhanced electric field. The PhC substrate enables surface-wave control through dispersion engineering, thereby enhancing the radiation efficiency of the antenna. The proposed antenna exhibits a radiation efficiency of approximately 73–93% over the entire UWB frequency band. Furthermore, the PhC substrate antenna achieves a maximum gain of 21 dB, exceeding that of a homogeneous-substrate THz bow-tie antenna by at least 3.3 dB. The results indicate that the antenna achieves |S11| < −10 dB impedance matching over the bandwidth of 105.9%, ranging from 0.4 to 1.3 THz. The proposed bow-tie dipole antenna integrated with a PhC substrate demonstrates a wide beam-scanning capability from −54° to +74° across the 0.39–1.16 THz band, while maintaining a compact footprint of 14.9 λ0 × 22.4 λ0. This combination of wide scanning, broad bandwidth, and ultra-low profile represents a notable advancement in the development of compact THz radiating structures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Biophotonics and Biomedical Optics)
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20 pages, 3544 KB  
Article
Study on the Construction and Performance Measurement of Tm2FeSbO7/BiYO3 Heterojunction Photocatalyst and the Photocatalytic Degradation of Sulfamethoxazole in Pharmaceutical Wastewater Under Visible Light Irradiation
by Jingfei Luan, Yu Cao, Jian Wang, Liang Hao, Anan Liu and Hengchang Zeng
Inorganics 2026, 14(3), 82; https://doi.org/10.3390/inorganics14030082 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 557
Abstract
A novel catalyst, Tm2FeSbO7, was synthesized by employing the solid-phase high-temperature sintering method, and, for the first time, it was utilized to create a Z-type heterojunction with BiYO3. A direct Z-scheme Tm2FeSbO7/BiYO3 [...] Read more.
A novel catalyst, Tm2FeSbO7, was synthesized by employing the solid-phase high-temperature sintering method, and, for the first time, it was utilized to create a Z-type heterojunction with BiYO3. A direct Z-scheme Tm2FeSbO7/BiYO3 heterojunction photocatalyst (TBHP) was successfully produced by employing the ball-milling technique. X-ray diffraction analysis results indicated that Tm2FeSbO7 crystallized in a cubic pyrochlorestructure which owned the Fd-3m space group, with a unit cell parameter of 10.1769 Å, whereas BiYO3 displayed a fluorite structure in the Fm-3m space group, with a unit cell parameter of 5.4222 Å. The Mossbauer spectrum of Tm2FeSbO7 showed that Fe3+ ions might locate at octahedral sites. The measured bandgap widths for the TBHP, Tm2FeSbO7, and BiYO3 were 2.14 eV, 2.21 eV, and 2.30 eV, respectively. Multiple experimental results demonstrated that the TBHP exhibited a higher valence band ionization potential, a narrower band gap width, and a higher removal efficiency of the sulfamethoxazole (SMX) compared with the Dy2TmSbO7/BiHoO3 heterojunction photocatalyst. Under visible-light irradiation (VISLI) of 115 min, the TBHP showcased exceptional photocatalytic elimination performance; therefore, the elimination rate of the SMX and the total organic carbon (TOC) mineralization rate reached 99.51% and 98.10%, respectively. In contrast to single-component Tm2FeSbO7, BiYO3, or conventional nitrogen-doped titanium dioxide (N-TiO2) catalyst, the TBHP exhibited removal efficiency enhancement for degrading the SMX by 1.17 times, 1.31 times, or 4.06 times. Simultaneously, the matching mineralization rate for removing the TOC density by employing the TBHP was 1.20 times, 1.34 times, or 4.73 times higher than that by employing Tm2FeSbO7, BiYO3, or conventional N-TiO2. Above experimental results indicated that the mineralization efficiency for removing TOC density by employing the TBHP was higher than that by employing Tm2FeSbO7, BiYO3, or N-TiO2. Radicals trapping experiments and the electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy results revealed that hydroxyl radicals, superoxide anions, and photoinduced holes were the primary active species during the catalytic elimination course of the SMX by employing the TBHP under VISLI. The results demonstrated that the direct Z-scheme TBHP, which was developed in this study, exhibited the maximal removal efficiency for degrading the SMX in contrast to Tm2FeSbO7, BiYO3, or N-TiO2. Additionally, the possible elimination routes and elimination mechanisms of the SMX were proposed. Therefore, an important scientific foundation for developing high-performance heterojunction catalysts was established. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Metal-Based Photocatalysts: From Synthesis to Applications)
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18 pages, 3684 KB  
Article
Effect of Geometric Parameters in the Seal Clearance on the Modal Characteristics of Pump-Turbine Runner
by Xue Zhao, Yu Tian, Ran Tao, Lingjiu Zhou and Zhengwei Wang
Water 2026, 18(6), 671; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18060671 - 13 Mar 2026
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Abstract
The runner of a pump turbine features a relatively flat structural configuration. The clearance cavities formed between the upper crown, lower band, and surrounding stationary components play a critical role in its dynamic behavior and operational stability. Consequently, a detailed modal analysis of [...] Read more.
The runner of a pump turbine features a relatively flat structural configuration. The clearance cavities formed between the upper crown, lower band, and surrounding stationary components play a critical role in its dynamic behavior and operational stability. Consequently, a detailed modal analysis of the runner is essential to ensure safe and stable operation. In this study, an acoustic–structure coupling method is adopted to investigate the wet modal characteristics of the pump-turbine runner, explicitly accounting for the added mass effect induced by the fluid in the external flow passages. By systematically varying the geometric parameters of the upper crown clearance cavity, the influence of seal clearance dimensions on the runner’s modal characteristics is examined. The results demonstrate that the radial clearance and the axial height of the seal cavity are the most influential parameters, reducing natural frequencies by up to 15.85% and 16.93%, respectively. The pitch of the seal teeth shows a secondary yet notable effect, inducing a frequency variation of 13.73%. In contrast, local labyrinth seal parameters, such as the number of teeth and tooth width, have a comparatively limited effect. This study provides practical guidance for vibration risk prediction, anti-resonance design, and operational stability assessment of high-head, large-capacity turbine runners by revealing the quantitative relationship between geometric parameters and modal frequencies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Hydraulics and Hydrodynamics)
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