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Keywords = broadband-narrowband integration

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19 pages, 4085 KB  
Article
A Bidirectionally Tunable Infrared Absorber via Phase-Transition-Modulated Fabry–Perot Resonance
by Yiqun Zhou, Qi Wang, Tianrong Ouyang, Chen Wang, Ruijin Hong and Dawei Zhang
Photonics 2026, 13(4), 352; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13040352 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 667
Abstract
A bidirectional infrared absorber leveraging the Fabry–Perot resonance within a cascaded metal-dielectric nano-film structure is proposed. The absorber integrates a top Ag–VO2–SiO2 film stack, an intermediate thin Ag metal layer, and a bottom Al2O3–Ti–Al2O [...] Read more.
A bidirectional infrared absorber leveraging the Fabry–Perot resonance within a cascaded metal-dielectric nano-film structure is proposed. The absorber integrates a top Ag–VO2–SiO2 film stack, an intermediate thin Ag metal layer, and a bottom Al2O3–Ti–Al2O3 layer, enabling switchable narrowband and broadband absorption under forward and backward illumination, respectively. Under front illumination, the structure exhibits a high narrowband absorption peak of 98% at a wavelength of 1110 nm when VO2 is in its metallic state. In contrast, when VO2 transitions to its insulating state, the absorption peak shifts to 1165 nm. Additionally, under back illumination, ultra-broadband absorption is achieved, covering a wavelength range of 1000–2760 nm with an average absorption of 98%. The proposed absorber demonstrates excellent absorption performance with structural simplicity and low manufacturing cost, offering great potential for applications in solar photovoltaic devices, photodetectors, and related fields. Full article
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18 pages, 6181 KB  
Article
Dual-Band Flexible MIMO Antenna for 5G/6G and Head-Mounted Devices
by Zhen Yu, Yanyan Xie, Xiaoying Ran, Xin Wang, Feng Wang, Yi Chang, Zhile Tao, Yang Niu and Xiangsheng Kong
Electronics 2026, 15(7), 1423; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15071423 - 29 Mar 2026
Viewed by 537
Abstract
A dual-band flexible wearable MIMO antenna with two operating modes, namely low-frequency narrowband and high-frequency broadband, is proposed and investigated in this paper. The antenna is based on a polyimide (PI) flexible printed circuit (FPC) substrate and has a compact size (90 mm [...] Read more.
A dual-band flexible wearable MIMO antenna with two operating modes, namely low-frequency narrowband and high-frequency broadband, is proposed and investigated in this paper. The antenna is based on a polyimide (PI) flexible printed circuit (FPC) substrate and has a compact size (90 mm × 40 mm × 0.1 mm), enabling easy integration into helmet-mounted devices. The antenna elements are fed by a coplanar waveguide (CPW) and integrated with a ground decoupling structure, achieving an isolation of at least 23.4 dB between the two ports across the entire operating frequency band. In addition, the impedance-matching characteristics of the antenna under bending conditions and the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of this MIMO antenna in a 1 g human-tissue model at 3.7 GHz and 4.6 GHz were evaluated. The results indicate that the antenna’s key electromagnetic performance remains relatively stable under bending conditions, and the SAR values comply with international limit requirements, verifying its feasibility for application in head-worn terminals. With an impedance bandwidth of −10 dB, this antenna achieves dual-band coverage at 3.42–3.84 GHz (relative bandwidth of 11.6%) and 4.37–7.80 GHz (relative bandwidth of 56.4%), effectively meeting the requirements of 5G/6G communication frequency bands. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Antenna Design and Its Applications, 2nd Edition)
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16 pages, 5386 KB  
Article
Terahertz Wave Absorber Relying on Strontium Titanate and Dirac Semimetal for Dual Adjustability
by Zeng Qu, Mengyuan Zhao, Yuanhao Huang, Yibin Gong, Shishengdian Lu, Xuanqi Zhang, Jiayun Wang, Yuanhui Wang, Yinuo Cheng and Binzhen Zhang
Micromachines 2026, 17(2), 266; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17020266 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 586
Abstract
Limited by the material response characteristics and structural design, the development of dynamically tunable terahertz absorbers with multi-functional properties remains a major challenge. In this study, a dual-tunable terahertz absorber based on the synergistic integration of strontium titanate (STO) and Dirac semimetal (BDS) [...] Read more.
Limited by the material response characteristics and structural design, the development of dynamically tunable terahertz absorbers with multi-functional properties remains a major challenge. In this study, a dual-tunable terahertz absorber based on the synergistic integration of strontium titanate (STO) and Dirac semimetal (BDS) is proposed. By utilizing the temperature-sensitive dielectric constant of STO and the electrically tunable conductivity of BDS, the device can realize on-demand switching between a broadband absorption mode (absorptivity >90% in the 1.347~2.1271 THz band) and a dual-narrowband absorption mode under external field excitation. Notably, the centrosymmetric cross-patterned structure on the top layer ensures the polarization insensitivity of the device, and this single structure can also serve as a high-sensitivity temperature sensor. Simulation results verify that the device exhibits stable performance under different incident angles and environmental variations. This study constructs a compact multi-functional device platform integrating dynamic absorption regulation and in situ sensing, which provides a new technical route for the development of intelligent terahertz systems in the fields of terahertz imaging, communication, detection and other related areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Flexible Intelligent Sensors: Design, Fabrication and Applications)
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17 pages, 2450 KB  
Article
Design, Fabrication and Characterization of Multi-Frequency MEMS Transducer for Photoacoustic Imaging
by Alberto Prud’homme and Frederic Nabki
Micromachines 2026, 17(1), 122; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17010122 - 17 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1459
Abstract
This work presents the design, fabrication, and experimental characterization of microelectromechanical system (MEMS) ultrasonic transducers engineered for multi-frequency operation in photoacoustic imaging (PAI). The proposed devices integrate multiple resonant geometries, including circular diaphragms, floated crosses, anchored cross membranes, and cantilever arrays, within compact [...] Read more.
This work presents the design, fabrication, and experimental characterization of microelectromechanical system (MEMS) ultrasonic transducers engineered for multi-frequency operation in photoacoustic imaging (PAI). The proposed devices integrate multiple resonant geometries, including circular diaphragms, floated crosses, anchored cross membranes, and cantilever arrays, within compact footprints to overcome the inherently narrow frequency response of conventional MEMS transducers. All devices were fabricated using the PiezoMUMPs commercial microfabrication process, with finite element simulations guiding modal optimization and laser Doppler vibrometry used for experimental validation in air. The circular diaphragm exhibited a narrowband response with a dominant resonance at 1.69 MHz and a quality factor (Q) of 268, confirming the bandwidth limitations of traditional geometries. In contrast, complex designs such as the floated cross and cantilever arrays achieved significantly broader spectral responses, with resonances spanning from 275 kHz to beyond 7.5 MHz. The cantilever array, with systematically varied arm lengths, achieved the highest modal density through asynchronous activation across the spectrum. Results demonstrate that structurally diverse MEMS devices can overcome the bandwidth constraints of traditional piezoelectric transducers. The integration of heterogeneous MEMS geometries offers a viable approach for broadband sensitivity in PAI, enabling improved spatial resolution and depth selectivity without compromising miniaturization or manufacturability. Full article
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14 pages, 1968 KB  
Article
Multispectral Camouflage Photonic Structure for Visible–IR–LiDAR Bands with Radiative Cooling
by Lehong Huang, Yuting Gao, Bo Peng and Caiwen Ma
Photonics 2026, 13(1), 31; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13010031 - 30 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1231
Abstract
The rapid development of detection technologies has increased the demand for multispectral camouflage materials capable of broadband concealment and effective thermal management. To address the conflicting optical requirements between infrared camouflage and LiDAR camouflage, we propose a composite design combining a germanium–ytterbium fluoride [...] Read more.
The rapid development of detection technologies has increased the demand for multispectral camouflage materials capable of broadband concealment and effective thermal management. To address the conflicting optical requirements between infrared camouflage and LiDAR camouflage, we propose a composite design combining a germanium–ytterbium fluoride (Ge/YbF3) selective emitter with an amorphous silicon (a-Si) two-dimensional periodic microstructure. The multilayer film, optimized using the transfer-matrix method and a particle swarm optimisation algorithm, achieves low emissivity in the 3–5 μm and 8–14 μm infrared atmospheric windows and high emissivity within 5–8 μm for radiative cooling, while introducing a narrowband absorption peak at 1.55 μm. Additionally, the a-Si microstructure provides strong narrowband absorption at 10.6 μm via a grating-resonance mechanism. FDTD simulations confirm low emissivity in the infrared windows, high absorptance at LiDAR wavelengths, and good angular and polarization robustness. This work demonstrates a multifunctional photonic structure capable of integrating infrared camouflage, laser camouflage, and thermal-radiation control. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Optoelectronics and Optical Materials)
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11 pages, 1933 KB  
Article
Switchable Thermal Emission Control Enabled by In3SbTe2 Phase Transition
by Yuanfang Lin, Jimin Wan, Weiyi Zha, Jiabao Sun, Zhenfang Yu, Huzheng Zhu, Pintu Ghosh and Qiang Li
Photonics 2025, 12(12), 1224; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12121224 - 11 Dec 2025
Viewed by 766
Abstract
Two types of devices capable of switchable infrared spectral control are demonstrated by utilizing the phase-change characteristics of In3SbTe2 (Indium–Antimony–Tellurium, IST), which transitions from a low-loss dielectric amorphous phase to a high-loss metallic crystalline state. Through comprehensive structural design, theoretical [...] Read more.
Two types of devices capable of switchable infrared spectral control are demonstrated by utilizing the phase-change characteristics of In3SbTe2 (Indium–Antimony–Tellurium, IST), which transitions from a low-loss dielectric amorphous phase to a high-loss metallic crystalline state. Through comprehensive structural design, theoretical calculation, simulation analysis, experimental measurement, and application demonstration, we realize distinct switching effects and functions of these two devices. In the first design, IST mono-layer thin films integrated with infrared-transparent substrates (KBr and ZnSe) enable switching between amorphous high transmittance and crystalline high reflectance states over the 2.5–15 μm range, suitable for infrared optical switches and stealth applications. In the second design, introducing a Si metasurface disk array atop the IST mono-layer thin film enables switching between broadband infrared transparency and narrowband high emissivity. This configuration allows independent spectral control of the infrared spectra within the non-atmospheric (5–8 μm) and atmospheric (8–14 μm) windows, providing a versatile platform for tunable thermal radiation management and adaptive infrared camouflage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Metasurfaces: Applications and Trends)
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15 pages, 3641 KB  
Article
Asymmetric Nano-Sensor Based on Inverted Trapezoidal U-Shaped Circular Cavity Structure
by Mengqi Zhao, Shubin Yan, Zhaokun Yan, Weijie Yang, Hongfu Chen, Guang Liu, Yang Cui and Taiquan Wu
Photonics 2025, 12(11), 1065; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12111065 - 28 Oct 2025
Viewed by 586
Abstract
This paper presents a novel asymmetric U-shaped refractive index sensor, which is based on a MIM waveguide and coupled with a U-shaped resonator, which integrates a ring, a circular cavity, and two rectangular cavities (URRCTR), in addition to an inverted rectangular nanostructure. The [...] Read more.
This paper presents a novel asymmetric U-shaped refractive index sensor, which is based on a MIM waveguide and coupled with a U-shaped resonator, which integrates a ring, a circular cavity, and two rectangular cavities (URRCTR), in addition to an inverted rectangular nanostructure. The efficiency of the proposed sensor was investigated and optimized through the FEM. Simulation results indicate that the interaction between the broadband mode supported by the inverted square-shaped structure on the primary waveguide and the confined narrowband mode of the URRCTR resonator generates a distinct asymmetric feature in the transmission profile, a characteristic indicative of Fano resonance. The geometric parameters of the structure are crucial for tuning the Fano resonance features. Through systematic optimization, the sensor achieves a sensitivity of 3480 nm/RIU and a figure of merit (FOM) of 55.23. Due to its high sensitivity, compact footprint, and favorable temperature-dependent properties, the presented sensor reveals considerable promise for various applications in integrated photonic sensing. Full article
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15 pages, 37613 KB  
Article
Wideband Reconfigurable Reflective Metasurface with 1-Bit Phase Control Based on Polarization Rotation
by Zahid Iqbal, Xiuping Li, Zihang Qi, Wenyu Zhao, Zaid Akram and Muhammad Ishfaq
Telecom 2025, 6(3), 65; https://doi.org/10.3390/telecom6030065 - 3 Sep 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3337
Abstract
The rapid expansion of broadband wireless communication systems, including 5G, satellite networks, and next-generation IoT platforms, has created a strong demand for antenna architectures capable of real-time beam control, compact integration, and broad frequency coverage. Traditional reflectarrays, while effective for narrowband applications, often [...] Read more.
The rapid expansion of broadband wireless communication systems, including 5G, satellite networks, and next-generation IoT platforms, has created a strong demand for antenna architectures capable of real-time beam control, compact integration, and broad frequency coverage. Traditional reflectarrays, while effective for narrowband applications, often face inherent limitations such as fixed beam direction, high insertion loss, and complex phase-shifting networks, making them less viable for modern adaptive and reconfigurable systems. Addressing these challenges, this work presents a novel wideband planar metasurface that operates as a polarization rotation reflective metasurface (PRRM), combining 90° polarization conversion with 1-bit reconfigurable phase modulation. The metasurface employs a mirror-symmetric unit cell structure, incorporating a cross-shaped patch with fan-shaped stub loading and integrated PIN diodes, connected through vertical interconnect accesses (VIAs). This design enables stable binary phase control with minimal loss across a significantly wide frequency range. Full-wave electromagnetic simulations confirm that the proposed unit cell maintains consistent cross-polarized reflection performance and phase switching from 3.83 GHz to 15.06 GHz, achieving a remarkable fractional bandwidth of 118.89%. To verify its applicability, the full-wave simulation analysis of a 16 × 16 array was conducted, demonstrating dynamic two-dimensional beam steering up to ±60° and maintaining a 3 dB gain bandwidth of 55.3%. These results establish the metasurface’s suitability for advanced beamforming, making it a strong candidate for compact, electronically reconfigurable antennas in high-speed wireless communication, radar imaging, and sensing systems. Full article
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34 pages, 711 KB  
Article
Criteria for Consistent Broadband Pulse Compression and Narrowband Echo Integration Operation in Fisheries Echosounder Backscattering Measurements
by Per Lunde and Audun Oppedal Pedersen
Fishes 2025, 10(8), 389; https://doi.org/10.3390/fishes10080389 - 6 Aug 2025
Viewed by 926
Abstract
Generic and consistent formulations for measurement of the backscattering cross section (σbs) and the volume backscattering coefficient (sv) using broadband pulse compression and narrowband echo integration are derived, for small- and finite-amplitude sound propagation. The theory [...] Read more.
Generic and consistent formulations for measurement of the backscattering cross section (σbs) and the volume backscattering coefficient (sv) using broadband pulse compression and narrowband echo integration are derived, for small- and finite-amplitude sound propagation. The theory applies to backscattering operation of echosounders and sonars in general, with focus on fisheries acoustics. Formally consistent mathematical relationships for broadband and narrowband operation of such instruments are established that ensure consistency with the underlying power budget equations on average-power form, bridging a gap in prior literature. The formulations give full flexibility in choice of transmit signals and reference signals for pulse compression. Generic and general criteria for quantitative consistency between broadband and narrowband operation are derived, establishing new knowledge and analysis tools. These criteria become identical for small- and finite-amplitude sound propagation. In addition to general criteria, two special cases are considered, relevant for actual operation scenarios. The criteria serve to test and evaluate the extent to which the methods used in broadband pulse compression and narrowband echo integration operating modes are correct and consistent, and to identify and reduce experienced discrepancies between such methods. These are topics of major concern for quantitative acoustic stock assessment, underlying national and international fisheries quota regulations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applications of Acoustics in Marine Fisheries)
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16 pages, 1350 KB  
Review
Advances in Langevin Piezoelectric Transducer Designs for Broadband Ultrasonic Transmitter Applications
by Jinwook Kim, Jinwoo Kim and Juwon Kang
Actuators 2025, 14(7), 355; https://doi.org/10.3390/act14070355 - 19 Jul 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3731
Abstract
Langevin ultrasonic transducers, also known as Tonpilz transducers, are widely used in high-power ultrasonic applications, including underwater sonar arrays, ultrasonic cleaning, and sonication devices. Traditionally designed for narrowband operation centered on a fundamental longitudinal resonance mode, their performance has been limited by structural [...] Read more.
Langevin ultrasonic transducers, also known as Tonpilz transducers, are widely used in high-power ultrasonic applications, including underwater sonar arrays, ultrasonic cleaning, and sonication devices. Traditionally designed for narrowband operation centered on a fundamental longitudinal resonance mode, their performance has been limited by structural constraints that tie resonance frequency to overall transducer length and mass. However, technical demands in biomedical, industrial, and underwater technologies have driven the development of broadband Langevin transducers capable of operating over wider frequency ranges. Lower frequencies are desirable for deep penetration and cavitation effects, while higher frequencies offer improved resolution and directivity. Recent design innovations have focused on modifications to the three key components of the transducer: the head mass, piezoelectric drive stack, and tail mass. Techniques such as integrating flexural or edge-resonance modes, adopting piezocomposite stacks, and tailoring structural geometry have shown promising improvements in bandwidth and transmitting efficiency. This review examines broadband Langevin transducer designs over the past three decades, offering detailed insights into design strategies for future development of high-power broadband ultrasonic transducers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Control Systems)
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25 pages, 34645 KB  
Article
DFN-YOLO: Detecting Narrowband Signals in Broadband Spectrum
by Kun Jiang, Kexiao Peng, Yuan Feng, Xia Guo and Zuping Tang
Sensors 2025, 25(13), 4206; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25134206 - 5 Jul 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2140
Abstract
With the rapid development of wireless communication technologies and the increasing demand for efficient spectrum utilization, broadband spectrum sensing has become critical in both civilian and military fields. Detecting narrowband signals under broadband environments, especially under low-signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) conditions, poses significant challenges due [...] Read more.
With the rapid development of wireless communication technologies and the increasing demand for efficient spectrum utilization, broadband spectrum sensing has become critical in both civilian and military fields. Detecting narrowband signals under broadband environments, especially under low-signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) conditions, poses significant challenges due to the complexity of time–frequency features and noise interference. To this end, this study presents a signal detection model named deformable feature-enhanced network–You Only Look Once (DFN-YOLO), specifically designed for blind signal detection in broadband scenarios. The DFN-YOLO model incorporates a deformable channel feature fusion network (DCFFN), replacing the concatenate-to-fusion (C2f) module to enhance the extraction and integration of channel features. The deformable attention mechanism embedded in DCFFN adaptively focuses on critical signal regions, while the loss function is optimized to the focal scaled intersection over union (Focal_SIoU), improving detection accuracy under low-SNR conditions. To support this task, a signal detection dataset is constructed and utilized to evaluate the performance of DFN-YOLO. The experimental results for broadband time–frequency spectrograms demonstrate that DFN-YOLO achieves a mean average precision (mAP50–95) of 0.850, averaged over IoU thresholds ranging from 0.50 to 0.95 with a step of 0.05, significantly outperforming mainstream object detection models such as YOLOv8, which serves as the benchmark baseline in this study. Additionally, the model maintains an average time estimation error within 5.55×105 s and provides preliminary center frequency estimation in the broadband spectrum. These findings underscore the strong potential of DFN-YOLO for blind signal detection in broadband environments, with significant implications for both civilian and military applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging Trends in Cybersecurity for Wireless Communication and IoT)
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24 pages, 4270 KB  
Article
Differentiated GNSS Baseband Jamming Suppression Method Based on Classification Decision Information
by Zhongliang Deng, Zhichao Zhang, Xiangchuan Gao and Peijia Liu
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(13), 7131; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15137131 - 25 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1714
Abstract
In complex urban electromagnetic environments, wireless positioning signals are subject to various types of interference, including narrowband, chirp, and pulse jamming. Traditional generic suppression methods struggle to achieve global optimization tailored to specific interference mechanisms. This paper proposes a classification-driven differentiated jamming suppression [...] Read more.
In complex urban electromagnetic environments, wireless positioning signals are subject to various types of interference, including narrowband, chirp, and pulse jamming. Traditional generic suppression methods struggle to achieve global optimization tailored to specific interference mechanisms. This paper proposes a classification-driven differentiated jamming suppression (CDDJ) method, which adaptively selects the optimal mitigation strategy by pre-identifying interference types and integrating classification confidence levels. First, the theoretical bounds of the output carrier-to-noise ratio (C/N0out) under typical interference scenarios are derived, characterizing the performance distribution of anti-jamming efficiency (Γ). Then, a mapping relationship between interference categories and their corresponding suppression strategies is established, along with decision criteria for strategy switching based on signal quality evaluation metrics. Finally, an OpenMax-Lite rejection layer is designed to handle low-confidence inputs, identify unknown jamming using the Weibull distribution, and implement a broadband conservative suppression policy. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method exhibits significant advantages across different interference types. Under high JSR conditions, the signal recovery rate improves by over 10% and 8% compared to that of the WPT and KLT methods, respectively. In terms of SINR performance, the proposed approach outperforms the AFF, TDPB, and FDPB methods by 1.5 dB, 1.1 dB, and 5.3 dB, respectively, thereby enhancing the reliability of wireless positioning in complex environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced GNSS Technologies: Measurement, Analysis, and Applications)
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13 pages, 2777 KB  
Article
Improving the Accuracy of Methane Sensor with Dual Measurement Modes Based on Off-Axis Integrated Cavity Output Spectroscopy Using White Noise Perturbation
by Ce Yang, Mingming Wen, Chen Chen, Chunguang Li, Jianyu Huang, Laiyong Song and Yu Li
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(10), 5562; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15105562 - 15 May 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1226
Abstract
A methane (CH4) sensor based on off-axis integrated cavity output spectroscopy (OA-ICOS) was developed, equipped with two measurement schemes: direct absorption spectroscopy (DAS) and wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS). The sensor used an optical resonant cavity composed of two high reflection mirrors [...] Read more.
A methane (CH4) sensor based on off-axis integrated cavity output spectroscopy (OA-ICOS) was developed, equipped with two measurement schemes: direct absorption spectroscopy (DAS) and wavelength modulation spectroscopy (WMS). The sensor used an optical resonant cavity composed of two high reflection mirrors (reflectivity > 99%). With a cavity length of 7 cm, an effective optical path length of 10.8 m and a cavity volume of 8.9 mL were achieved. A distributed feedback laser was used to precisely target the CH4 absorption line near 1.6537 µm. Compared with the original system, the cavity mode noise of the CH4 sensor was further reduced by adding white noise perturbations. The white noise perturbations were generated by the broadband random noise from the signal generator. The special customized narrowband RF noise source was not required. The system complexity and cost could be reduced. In DAS mode, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the OA-ICOS was 16.2 and the minimum detection limit (MDL) was 2.2 ppm at 117 s. In WMS mode, the SNR of the OA-ICOS was 113.9 and the MDL was 1.2 ppm at 106 s. Compared with the results obtained from the WMS mode and DAS mode, the SNR and MDL was improved 7.0 times and 1.8 times, respectively. The proposed sensor system not only enabled high-accuracy trace gas measurement, but also demonstrated strong potential for applications due to its compact design and low cost. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Near/Mid-Infrared Lasers: Latest Advances and Applications)
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16 pages, 3126 KB  
Article
Waveguide Coupled Full-Color Quantum Dot Light-Emitting Diodes Modulated by Microcavities
by Yilan Zhang, Wenhao Wang, Fankai Zheng, Jiajun Zhu, Guanding Mei, Yuxuan Ye, Jieyu Tan, Hechun Zhang, Qiang Jing, Bin He, Kai Wang and Dan Wu
Photonics 2025, 12(5), 427; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12050427 - 29 Apr 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2461
Abstract
Integrated light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with waveguides play an important role in applications such as augmented reality (AR) displays, particularly regarding coupling efficiency optimization. Quantum dot light-emitting diodes (QLEDs), an emerging high-performance optoelectronic device, demonstrate substantial potential for next-generation display technologies. This study investigates [...] Read more.
Integrated light-emitting diodes (LEDs) with waveguides play an important role in applications such as augmented reality (AR) displays, particularly regarding coupling efficiency optimization. Quantum dot light-emitting diodes (QLEDs), an emerging high-performance optoelectronic device, demonstrate substantial potential for next-generation display technologies. This study investigates the influence of microcavity modulation on the output of QLEDs coupled with a silicon nitride (SiNx) waveguide by simulating a white light QLED (W-QLED) with a broad spectrum and mixed RGB QDs (RGB-QLED) with a comparatively narrower spectrum. The microcavity converts both W-QLED and RGB-QLED emissions from broadband white-light emissions into narrowband single-wavelength outputs. Specifically, both of them have demonstrated wavelength tuning and full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) narrowing across the visible spectrum from 400 nm to 750 nm due to the microcavity modulation. The resulting RGB-QLED achieves a FWHM of 11.24 nm and reaches 110.76% of the National Television System Committee 1953 (NTSC 1953) standard color gamut, which is a 20.95% improvement over W-QLED. Meanwhile, due to the Purcell effect of the microcavity, the output efficiency of the QLED coupled with a SiNx waveguide is also significantly improved by optimizing the thickness of the Ag anode and introducing a tilted reflective mirror into the SiNx waveguide. Moreover, the optimal output efficiency of RGB-QLED with the tilted Ag mirror is 10.13%, representing a tenfold increase compared to the sample without the tilted Ag mirror. This design demonstrates an efficient and compact approach for the near-eye full-color display technology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quantum Dot Light-Emitting Diodes: Innovations and Applications)
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15 pages, 3256 KB  
Article
The Neural Correlates of Consciousness: A Spectral Exponent Approach to Diagnosing Disorders of Consciousness
by Ying Zhao, Anqi Wang, Weiqiao Zhao, Nantu Hu, Steven Laureys and Haibo Di
Brain Sci. 2025, 15(4), 377; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci15040377 - 4 Apr 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 4709
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Disorder of consciousness (DoC) poses diagnostic challenges due to behavioral assessment limitations. This study evaluates the spectral exponent (SE)—a neurophysiological biomarker quantifying the decay slope of electroencephalography (EEG) aperiodic activity—as an objective tool for consciousness stratification and clinical behavior scores correlation. Methods: [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Disorder of consciousness (DoC) poses diagnostic challenges due to behavioral assessment limitations. This study evaluates the spectral exponent (SE)—a neurophysiological biomarker quantifying the decay slope of electroencephalography (EEG) aperiodic activity—as an objective tool for consciousness stratification and clinical behavior scores correlation. Methods: The study involved 15 DoC patients, nine conscious brain-injured controls (BI), and 23 healthy controls (HC). Resting-state 32-channel EEG data were analyzed to compute SE across broadband (1–40 Hz) and narrowband (1–20 Hz, 20–40 Hz). Statistical frameworks included Bonferroni-corrected Kruskal–Wallis H tests, Bayesian ANOVA, and correlation analyses with CRS-R behavioral scores. Results: Narrowband SE (1–20 Hz) showed superior diagnostic sensitivity, differentiating DoC from controls (HC vs. DoC: p < 0.0001; BI vs. DoC: p = 0.0006) and MCS from VS/UWS (p = 0.0014). SE correlated positively with CRS-R index (1–20 Hz: r = 0.590, p = 0.021) and visual subscale (1–20 Hz: r = 0.684, p = 0.005). High-frequency (20–40 Hz) SE exhibited inconsistent results. Longitudinal tracking in an individual revealed a reduction in SE negativity, a flattening of the 1/f slope, and behavioral recovery occurring in parallel. Conclusions: Narrowband SE (1–20 Hz) is a robust biomarker for consciousness quantification, overcoming behavioral assessment subjectivity. Its correlation with visual function highlights potential clinical utility. Future studies should validate SE in larger cohorts and integrate multimodal neuroimaging. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Neurorehabilitation)
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