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21 pages, 29469 KB  
Article
Seismo-Stratigraphic Architecture of the Campania–Latium Tyrrhenian Margin: New Insights from High-Resolution Sparker Profiles
by Gemma Aiello, Marina Iorio, Agostino Meo and Maria Rosaria Senatore
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2026, 14(3), 269; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse14030269 - 28 Jan 2026
Abstract
High-resolution single-channel Sparker (1 kJ) profiles have been carried out to reconstruct the seismo-stratigraphic architecture of a sector of the Campania–Latium Tyrrhenian margin (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy). Seven seismic lines between the Volturno river mouth and the southern Latium margin were processed in [...] Read more.
High-resolution single-channel Sparker (1 kJ) profiles have been carried out to reconstruct the seismo-stratigraphic architecture of a sector of the Campania–Latium Tyrrhenian margin (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy). Seven seismic lines between the Volturno river mouth and the southern Latium margin were processed in IHS Kingdom® software (4.0) at the University of Sannio (Benevento, Italy) and interpreted at the CNR-ISMAR (Naples, Italy) using seismic- and sequence-stratigraphic criteria. The Sparker dataset refines correlations with previously interpreted Chirp profiles and improves the imaging of fault patterns and key stratigraphic markers. Several seismo-stratigraphic units displaced by normal faults were recognized. Unit 1 represents the acoustic substratum of the high-resolution record, whereas Unit 2 corresponds to a thick relict prograding wedge that thickens toward the Volturno river mouth. A mounded lowstand unit is interpreted as deposits related to the Volturno river delta/fan system. Volcanic units, including the Villa Literno volcanic complex and local volcanic edifices, are locally identified. Overall, the results show that Sparker processing and interpretation provide robust constraints on the stratigraphic architecture and Late Quaternary tectono-sedimentary evolution of deltaic continental shelves. In particular, while previous Chirp studies have effectively constrained the stratigraphic architecture of the Late Quaternary depositional sequence and the geometry of the NYT reflector, this study provides new insights about deeper progradational seismo-stratigraphic units and related volcanic deposits and their tectono-stratigraphic setting. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Sedimentology and Coastal and Marine Geology, 3rd Edition)
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21 pages, 9238 KB  
Article
Effect of Dielectric Thickness on Filamentary Mode Nanosecond-Pulse Dielectric Barrier Discharge at Low Pressure
by Anbang Sun, Yulin Guo, Yanru Li and Yifei Zhu
Plasma 2026, 9(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/plasma9010004 - 27 Jan 2026
Abstract
Filamentary mode, as a common phenomenon that appears in dielectric barrier discharge (DBD), is realized by rod-to-rod electrodes in N2-O2 mixtures at 80 mbar. The effects of the dielectric thickness on the characteristics of filamentary DBD are investigated through experiments [...] Read more.
Filamentary mode, as a common phenomenon that appears in dielectric barrier discharge (DBD), is realized by rod-to-rod electrodes in N2-O2 mixtures at 80 mbar. The effects of the dielectric thickness on the characteristics of filamentary DBD are investigated through experiments and simulations. The discharges are driven by a positive unipolar nanosecond pulse voltage with 15.8 kV amplitude, 9 ns rise time (Tr10–90%), and 14 ns pulse width. The characteristics of filamentary DBD are recorded with an intensified charge-coupled device and a Pearson current probe in the experiment, and a 2D axisymmetric fluid mode is established to analyze the discharge. Surface discharges occur on the anode and cathode dielectric after the breakdown, and the discharge is gradually extinguished as the applied voltage decreases. A thinner total dielectric thickness (Da + Dc) leads to larger currents, stronger discharges, and wider discharge channels. These characteristics are consistent when the total dielectric thickness is the same but anode dielectric thickness and cathode dielectric thickness are different (DaDc ≠ 0). If the anode is a metal electrode (Da = 0), the current will be substantially large, and two discharge modes are observed: stable mono-filament discharge mode and random multi-filament discharge mode. It is found in simulations that the dielectric thickness changes the electric field configuration. The electric field is stronger with the decrease in dielectric thickness and leads to a more intense ionization which is responsible for most of the observed effects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances of Dielectric Barrier Discharges)
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26 pages, 2618 KB  
Article
A Cascaded Batch Bayesian Yield Optimization Method for Analog Circuits via Deep Transfer Learning
by Ziqi Wang, Kaisheng Sun and Xiao Shi
Electronics 2026, 15(3), 516; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15030516 - 25 Jan 2026
Viewed by 138
Abstract
In nanometer integrated-circuit (IC) manufacturing, advanced technology scaling has intensified the effects of process variations on circuit reliability and performance. Random fluctuations in parameters such as threshold voltage, channel length, and oxide thickness further degrade design margins and increase the likelihood of functional [...] Read more.
In nanometer integrated-circuit (IC) manufacturing, advanced technology scaling has intensified the effects of process variations on circuit reliability and performance. Random fluctuations in parameters such as threshold voltage, channel length, and oxide thickness further degrade design margins and increase the likelihood of functional failures. These variations often lead to rare circuit failure events, underscoring the importance of accurate yield estimation and robust design methodologies. Conventional Monte Carlo yield estimation is computationally infeasible as millions of simulations are required to capture failure events with extremely low probability. This paper presents a novel reliability-based circuit design optimization framework that leverages deep transfer learning to improve the efficiency of repeated yield analysis in optimization iterations. Based on pre-trained neural network models from prior design knowledge, we utilize model fine-tuning to accelerate importance sampling (IS) for yield estimation. To improve estimation accuracy, adversarial perturbations are introduced to calibrate uncertainty near the model decision boundary. Moreover, we propose a cascaded batch Bayesian optimization (CBBO) framework that incorporates a smart initialization strategy and a localized penalty mechanism, guiding the search process toward high-yield regions while satisfying nominal performance constraints. Experimental validation on SRAM circuits and amplifiers reveals that CBBO achieves a computational speedup of 2.02×–4.63× over state-of-the-art (SOTA) methods, without compromising accuracy and robustness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Advanced Integrated Circuit Design and Application)
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20 pages, 5434 KB  
Article
Study of the Cooling Performance of Electric Vehicle Motors Using a Centripetal-Inclined Oil Spray Cooling System
by Jinchi Hou, Jianping Li, Junqiu Li, Jingyi Ruan, Hao Qu and Hanjun Luo
Energies 2026, 19(3), 580; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19030580 - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 89
Abstract
Efficient cooling systems are crucial for achieving high efficiency and power density in electric vehicle motors. To enhance motor cooling performance, a novel oil spray cooling system was developed, referred to as the centripetal-inclined oil spray (CIOS) cooling system. The CIOS cooling system [...] Read more.
Efficient cooling systems are crucial for achieving high efficiency and power density in electric vehicle motors. To enhance motor cooling performance, a novel oil spray cooling system was developed, referred to as the centripetal-inclined oil spray (CIOS) cooling system. The CIOS cooling system features axial oil channels evenly distributed on the surface of the stator core, with each channel connected at both ends to stepped oil channels. This configuration allows for direct oil spraying towards the center at specific inclined angles without the need for additional components such as nozzles, oil spray rings, and oil spray tubes, which reduces costs, minimizes the risk of oil leakage, and enhances motor reliability. Electromagnetic and computational fluid dynamic simulations were conducted on the motor with the CIOS cooling system. The results indicated that the CIOS cooling system adversely impacted core losses and torque, while these effects were minimized after optimization, with losses increasing by up to 0.29% and torque decreasing by up to 0.45%. The CIOS cooling system achieved stable oil spraying, forming oil films on the end-winding with a maximum formation rate of 49.4% and an average thickness of 1.56 mm. Compared to the motor with oil spray rings, the motor with the CIOS cooling system exhibited lower temperatures across all components and more uniform cooling. Finally, the cooling performance of the CIOS cooling system was verified through experiments, and the results showed that the measured temperature closely matched the simulated results, with a maximum error of 5.9%. The findings in this study are expected to provide new insights for optimizing oil cooling systems in electric vehicle motors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section E: Electric Vehicles)
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19 pages, 3828 KB  
Article
Norisoboldine Induces Endothelium-Dependent Vasorelaxation and Attenuates Hypertension by Modulating Ca2+-eNOS Signaling, Oxidative Stress, and Inflammation
by Jiaze Li, Shurui Wang, Enyi Jin, Ziyi Zhao, Jinyue Liang, Yun Jung Lee and Lihua Cao
Antioxidants 2026, 15(1), 131; https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox15010131 - 20 Jan 2026
Viewed by 165
Abstract
Vascular function is a direct factor affecting blood pressure, and it is a primary strategy for clinically controlling hypertension by regulating the constriction/relaxation of blood vessels. This study evaluates the vasodilatory and anti-hypertensive effects of norisoboldine (NOR), an isoquinoline alkaloid in Ayurvedic medicine. [...] Read more.
Vascular function is a direct factor affecting blood pressure, and it is a primary strategy for clinically controlling hypertension by regulating the constriction/relaxation of blood vessels. This study evaluates the vasodilatory and anti-hypertensive effects of norisoboldine (NOR), an isoquinoline alkaloid in Ayurvedic medicine. The rat thoracic aorta was isolated to investigate the vasodilatory effect, and L-NAME-induced hypertensive rats were established, respectively. In the isolated vascular ring, removal of the endothelium resulted in a significant decrease in the vasodilatory effect. Pretreatment with L-NAME, ODQ, KT5823, WT, Tri, Dilt, calcium-free solution, TG, Gd3+, 2-APB, Indo, 4-AP, Gli, and BaCl2 inhibited the vasodilatory effect of NOR. In vascular endothelial cells, NOR promoted eNOS phosphorylation and inhibited TNF-α-induced expression of ICAM-1 and VCAM-1. SBP and DBP were significantly decreased after administration of different doses of NOR in the femoral vein of rats. In addition, NOR significantly reduced the blood pressure of L-NAME-induced hypertensive rats, up-regulated the serum levels of NO, cGMP, and CAT, and down-regulated MDA, IL-6, and TNF-α in hypertensive rats. NOR administration improved pathological changes in the thoracic aorta by regulating the arrangement of thoracic aortic smooth muscle cells, decreasing the thickness of the thoracic aortic wall, and reducing the degree of collagen deposition and fibrosis. In conclusion, the vasodilatory mechanisms of NOR were related to the Ca2+-eNOS signaling pathway, including the PGI2 and various K+/Ca2+ channels, the inositol triphosphate receptor (IP3R) calcium release, and the α-adrenergic receptor pathway. The anti-hypertensive mechanism of NOR may be related to increased NO and cGMP bioavailability, inhibition of oxidative stress and inflammatory responses, and improved vascular remodeling. Full article
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13 pages, 2128 KB  
Article
Remarkably High Effective Mobility of 301 cm2/V·s in 3 nm Ultra-Thin-Body SnO2 Transistor by UV Annealing
by An-Chieh Shih, Yi-Hao Zhan and Albert Chin
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(2), 133; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16020133 - 19 Jan 2026
Viewed by 261
Abstract
At an ultra-thin 3 nm SnO2 channel thickness, a record-high effective mobility (µeff) of 301 cm2/V·s, field-effect mobility (µFE) of 304 cm2/V·s, and a sharp subthreshold swing (SS) of 201 mV/decade are [...] Read more.
At an ultra-thin 3 nm SnO2 channel thickness, a record-high effective mobility (µeff) of 301 cm2/V·s, field-effect mobility (µFE) of 304 cm2/V·s, and a sharp subthreshold swing (SS) of 201 mV/decade are achieved at a high carrier density (Ne) of 5 × 1012 cm−2. These excellent transport properties are attributed to ultraviolet (UV) light annealing. The resulting µeff is significantly higher than that of Molybdenum Disulfide (MoS2) and Tungsten Diselenide (WSe2), and is more than twice that of single-crystalline Si channel transistors at the same quasi-two-dimensional (2D) thickness of 3 nm (equivalent to five monolayers of MoS2). UV annealing not only enhances µeff and µFE but also sharpens the SS, which is crucial for low-power operation. This improved SS is attributed to reduced scattering from charged interface traps, as supported by µeff-Ne analysis, thereby increasing the transistor’s mobility. The realization of such high-mobility devices at a quasi-2D thickness of only 3 nm is of particular importance for the further downscaling of ultra-thin-body transistors for high-speed computing and monolithic three-dimensional (M3D) integration. Furthermore, the wide bandgap of SnO2 (3.7 eV) enables operation at relatively high voltages, paving the way for pioneering ternary logic applications. Full article
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25 pages, 9566 KB  
Article
Integrated Geological and Geophysical Approaches for Geohazard Assessment in Salinas, Coastal Ecuador
by María Quiñónez-Macías, Lucrecia Moreno-Alcívar, José Luis Pastor, Davide Besenzon, Pablo B. Palacios and Miguel Cano
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 938; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16020938 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 691
Abstract
The Santa Elena Peninsula has experienced local subduction earthquakes in 1901 (7.7 Mw) and 1933 (6.9 Mw), during which local ground conditions, including deposits of longshore-current sediments, paleo-lagoon or marsh, sandspit, and ancient tidal channel sediments, exhibited various coseismic deformation behaviors in Quaternary [...] Read more.
The Santa Elena Peninsula has experienced local subduction earthquakes in 1901 (7.7 Mw) and 1933 (6.9 Mw), during which local ground conditions, including deposits of longshore-current sediments, paleo-lagoon or marsh, sandspit, and ancient tidal channel sediments, exhibited various coseismic deformation behaviors in Quaternary soils of inferior geotechnical quality. This study shows that geophysical profiles from seismic refraction and shear-wave velocities are correlated with stratigraphic data from sedimentary sequences obtained from slope cutting and geotechnical drilling. This database is used to create a comprehensive map to describe the lithological units of Salinas’ urban geology. The thickness of the Tertiary–Quaternary sedimentary sequences and the depth to the bedrock of the Piñon and Cayo geological formations determine the periods of sites in these stratigraphic sequences, which range from 0.3 to 1.5 s. This study provides the first geotechnical zoning map for the city of Salinas at a scale of 1:25,000, which is a technical requirement of the Ecuadorian construction standard. This geotechnical zoning information is essential for appropriate land management in Salinas and its neighboring cities, La Libertad and Santa Elena, as well as for outlining municipal restrictions on future construction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Earthquake Engineering: Geological Impacts and Disaster Assessment)
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13 pages, 1760 KB  
Article
Optical Bistability in a Quantum Dot–Metallic Nanoshell–Cell Membrane Hybrid System: Applications for High-Performance Biosensing
by Xiao Ma, Hongmei Gong, Yuxiang Peng, Linwen Long and Jianbo Li
Coatings 2026, 16(1), 109; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16010109 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 260
Abstract
We investigate optical bistability (OB) in a hybrid system comprising a semiconductor quantum dot (SQD), a metallic nanoshell (MNS), and a cell membrane within the framework of the multipole approximation. Bistability phase diagrams plotted in the system’s parameter subspaces demonstrate that, in the [...] Read more.
We investigate optical bistability (OB) in a hybrid system comprising a semiconductor quantum dot (SQD), a metallic nanoshell (MNS), and a cell membrane within the framework of the multipole approximation. Bistability phase diagrams plotted in the system’s parameter subspaces demonstrate that, in the weak exciton–phonon coupling regime, dynamic switching of bistable states among no-channel, single-channel, and dual-channel configurations can be achieved via precise modulation of the MNS’s dielectric shell thickness. Especially, a critical sensing threshold is identified: the absorption peak disappears and a bistable effect emerges when only 1.82% of normal cells undergo malignant transformation. Furthermore, the bistable region exhibits a gradual broadening trend with an increasing proportion of cancerous cells, yielding a quantitative and ultra-sensitive readout that underpins a highly accurate strategy for early cancer diagnosis. These findings not only deepen our fundamental understanding of bistability regulation in hybrid quantum-plasmonic systems interfaced with biological materials but also offer valuable insights for the development of next-generation optical switches and biomedical sensing platforms. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Surface Coatings for Biomedicine and Bioengineering)
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23 pages, 4551 KB  
Article
Provenance Tracing of Uranium-Bearing Sandstone of Saihan Formation in Naomugeng Sag, Erlian Basin, China
by Caili Zhang, Zhao Li, Hu Peng, Yue Wu, Ning Luo, Kang Pang, Zhiwei Qiu, Xiaolin Yu, Haiqi Quan, Miao Wang, Qi Li, Yongjiu Liu, Yinan Zhuang and Chengyuan Jin
Minerals 2026, 16(1), 76; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16010076 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 240
Abstract
The northern part of the Naomugeng Sag in the Erlian Basin shows favorable sandstone-type uranium mineralization in the lower member of the Saihan Formation. The sandstone thickness ranges from 39.67 to 140.36 m, with an average sand content ratio of 76.33%, indicating broad [...] Read more.
The northern part of the Naomugeng Sag in the Erlian Basin shows favorable sandstone-type uranium mineralization in the lower member of the Saihan Formation. The sandstone thickness ranges from 39.67 to 140.36 m, with an average sand content ratio of 76.33%, indicating broad prospecting potential. This study focuses on samples from uranium ore holes and uranium-mineralized holes in the area, conducting grain-size analysis of uranium-bearing sandstones, heavy mineral assemblage analysis, and detrital zircon U-Pb dating to systematically investigate provenance characteristics. The results indicate that the uranium-bearing sandstones in the lower member of the Saihan Formation were primarily transported by rolling and suspension, characteristic of braided river channel deposits. The heavy mineral assemblage is dominated by zircon + limonite + garnet + ilmenite, suggesting that the sedimentary provenance is mainly composed of intermediate-acid magmatic rocks with minor metamorphic components. Detrital zircon U-Pb ages are mainly concentrated in the ranges of 294–217 Ma (Early Permian to Late Triassic), 146–112 Ma (Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous), 434–304 Ma (Late Carboniferous to Early Permian), and 495–445 Ma (Middle–Late Ordovician to Early Silurian). Combined with comparisons of the ages of surrounding rock masses, the provenance of the uranium-bearing sandstones is mainly derived from intermediate-acid granites of the Early Permian–Late Triassic and Middle Jurassic–Early Cretaceous periods in the southern part of the Sonid Uplift, with minor contributions from metamorphic and volcanic rock fragments. The average zircon uranium content is 520.53 ppm, with a Th/U ratio of 0.73, indicating that the provenance not only supplied detrital materials but also provided uranium-rich rock bodies that contributed essential metallogenic materials for uranium mineralization. This study offers critical insights for regional prospecting and exploration deployment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Selected Papers from the 7th National Youth Geological Congress)
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19 pages, 4811 KB  
Article
Research on Structure and Electromagnetic Properties of a Dual-Channel Coupled Radial Magnetic Field Resolver
by Hao Wang, Jundi Wang, Hong Chen and Changchao Li
Vehicles 2026, 8(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/vehicles8010018 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 137
Abstract
This paper presents a kind of dual-channel coupled radial magnetic field resolver (DCCRMFR). The exciting winding and signal winding of this resolver adopt the structure of orthogonal phase. The number of turns and distribution of the four phase signal winding have been designed. [...] Read more.
This paper presents a kind of dual-channel coupled radial magnetic field resolver (DCCRMFR). The exciting winding and signal winding of this resolver adopt the structure of orthogonal phase. The number of turns and distribution of the four phase signal winding have been designed. The rotor has a double-wave magnetic conductive material structure. The variable reluctance mechanism between the stator and the rotor is derived by analytical method, and the feasibility of changing the coupling area for variable reluctance is obtained. The inductance of DCCRMFR was theoretically derived through the winding function method and combined with the finite element simulation method to obtain the inductance variation law and verify the correctness of the resolver design. Then simulation analysis was conducted on the output signal of DCCRMFR to extract the total harmonic distortion (THD) of the envelope of the electromotive force (EMF) output from the signal winding. Taking THD as the optimization objective, the optimized DCCRMFR simulation model is obtained by analyzing the air-gap length between the stator and the rotor and the thickness ratio of rotor. Finally, experimental measurements were conducted on a prototype model of a two pole pairs DCCRMFR, and the measurement results were compared and analyzed with simulation results to verify the correctness of the structural design and optimization of this DCCRMFR. Full article
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18 pages, 10340 KB  
Article
Numerical Study on Thermal–Flow Characteristics of Liquid Metal Blankets in a Magnetic Field
by Shuaibing Chang, Feng Li and Jiewen Deng
Magnetochemistry 2026, 12(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/magnetochemistry12010010 - 13 Jan 2026
Viewed by 164
Abstract
The tokamak is a toroidal device that utilizes magnetic confinement to achieve controlled nuclear fusion. One of the major technical challenges hindering the development of this technology lies in effectively dissipating the generated heat. In this study, the inner blanket structure of a [...] Read more.
The tokamak is a toroidal device that utilizes magnetic confinement to achieve controlled nuclear fusion. One of the major technical challenges hindering the development of this technology lies in effectively dissipating the generated heat. In this study, the inner blanket structure of a tokamak is selected as the research object, and a multi–physics numerical model coupling magnetic field, temperature field, and flow field is established. The effects of background magnetic field strength, blanket channel width, and inlet velocity of the liquid metal coolant on the thermal–flow characteristics of the blanket were systematically investigated. The results indicate that compared with the L-shaped channel, the U-shaped channel reduces flow resistance in the turning region by 6%, exhibits a more uniform temperature distribution, and decreases the outlet–inlet temperature difference by 4%, thereby significantly enhancing the heat transfer efficiency. An increase in background magnetic field strength suppresses coolant flow but has only a limited impact on the temperature field. When the background magnetic field reaches a certain strength, the magnetic field has a certain hindering effect on the flow of the working fluid. Increasing the thickness of the blankets appropriately can alleviate the hindering effect of the magnetic field on the flow and improve the velocity distribution in the outlet area. Full article
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20 pages, 4195 KB  
Article
Electro-Physical Model of Amorphous Silicon Junction Field-Effect Transistors for Energy-Efficient Sensor Interfaces in Lab-on-Chip Platforms
by Nicola Lovecchio, Giulia Petrucci, Fabio Cappelli, Martina Baldini, Vincenzo Ferrara, Augusto Nascetti, Giampiero de Cesare and Domenico Caputo
Chips 2026, 5(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/chips5010001 - 12 Jan 2026
Viewed by 136
Abstract
This work presents an advanced electro-physical model for hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) Junction Field Effect Transistors (JFETs) to enable the design of devices with energy-efficient analog interface building blocks for Lab-on-Chip (LoC) systems. The presence of this device can support monolithic integration with [...] Read more.
This work presents an advanced electro-physical model for hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) Junction Field Effect Transistors (JFETs) to enable the design of devices with energy-efficient analog interface building blocks for Lab-on-Chip (LoC) systems. The presence of this device can support monolithic integration with thin-film sensors and circuit-level design through a validated compact formulation. The model accurately describes the behavior of a-Si:H JFETs addressing key physical phenomena, such as the channel thickness dependence on the gate-source voltage when the channel approaches full depletion. A comprehensive framework was developed, integrating experimental data and mathematical refinements to ensure robust predictions of JFET performance across operating regimes, including the transition toward full depletion and the associated current-limiting behavior. The model was validated through a broad set of fabricated devices, demonstrating excellent agreement with experimental data in both the linear and saturation regions. Specifically, the validation was carried out at 25 °C on 15 fabricated JFET configurations (12 nominally identical devices per configuration), using the mean characteristics of 9 devices with standard-deviation error bars. In the investigated bias range, the devices operate in a sub-µA regime (up to several hundred nA), which naturally supports µW-level dissipation for low-power interfaces. This work provides a compact, experimentally validated modeling basis for the design and optimization of a-Si:H JFET-based LoC front-end/readout circuits within technology-constrained and energy-efficient operating conditions. Full article
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15 pages, 1802 KB  
Article
Aggregation-Tuned Charge Transport and Threshold Voltage Modulation in Poly(3-hexylthiophene) Field-Effect Transistors
by Byoungnam Park
Materials 2026, 19(2), 279; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19020279 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 286
Abstract
In this report, a thickness-driven, aggregation–structure–transport optimum in sonicated poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) FETs was investigated. Mobility peaks at ~10–20 nm, coincident with a minimum in the photoluminescence (PL) vibronic ratio I0-0/I0-1 (strong H-aggregate interchain coupling) [...] Read more.
In this report, a thickness-driven, aggregation–structure–transport optimum in sonicated poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) FETs was investigated. Mobility peaks at ~10–20 nm, coincident with a minimum in the photoluminescence (PL) vibronic ratio I0-0/I0-1 (strong H-aggregate interchain coupling) and X-ray diffraction sharpening of the (100) lamellar peak with slightly reduced d-spacing, indicate tighter π–π stacking and larger crystalline coherence. Absorption analysis (Spano model) is consistent with this enhanced interchain order. The mobility maximum arises from an optimal balance: J-aggregate–like intrachain planarity supports along-chain transport, while H-aggregates provide interchain connectivity for efficient hopping. Below this thickness, insufficient interchain coupling limits transport; above it, over-aggregation and disorder introduce traps and weaken gate control. The sharp rise in threshold voltage beyond the critical thickness indicates more trap states or fixed charges forming within the film bulk. As a result, a larger gate bias is needed to deplete the channel (remove excess holes) and switch the device off. These results show that electrical gating can be tuned via solution processing (sonication) and film thickness—guiding the design of P3HT devices for photovoltaics and sensing. Full article
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26 pages, 12429 KB  
Article
Unified Parametric Optimization Framework for Microchannel Fin Geometries in High-Power Processor Cooling
by Abtin Ataei
Micromachines 2026, 17(1), 86; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17010086 - 8 Jan 2026
Viewed by 285
Abstract
This study presents a unified parametric optimization framework for the thermal design of microchannel spreaders used in high-power processor cooling. The fin geometry is expressed in a shape-agnostic parametric form defined by fin thickness, top and bottom gap widths, and channel height, without [...] Read more.
This study presents a unified parametric optimization framework for the thermal design of microchannel spreaders used in high-power processor cooling. The fin geometry is expressed in a shape-agnostic parametric form defined by fin thickness, top and bottom gap widths, and channel height, without prescribing a fixed cross-section. This approach accommodates practical fin profiles ranging from rectangular to tapered and V-shaped, allowing continuous geometric optimization within manufacturability and hydraulic limits. A coupled analytical–numerical model integrates conduction through the spreader base, interfacial resistance across the thermal interface material (TIM), and convection within the coolant channels while enforcing a pressure-drop constraint. The optimization uses a deterministic continuation method with smooth sigmoid mappings and penalty functions to maintain constraint satisfaction and stable convergence across the design space. The total thermal resistance (Rtot) is minimized over spreader conductivities ks=4002200 W m−1 K−1 (copper to CVD diamond), inlet fluid velocities Uin=0.55.5 m s−1, maximum pressure drops of 10–50 kPa, and fluid pass counts Np{1,2,3}. The resulting maps of optimized fin dimensions as functions of ks provide continuous design charts that clarify how material conductivity, flow rate, and pass configuration collectively determine the geometry, minimizing total thermal resistance, thereby reducing chip temperature rise for a given heat load. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Thermal Transport and Management of Electronic Devices)
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19 pages, 5586 KB  
Article
Performance Simulation and Optimal Design for Silicon–Nitride Arrayed Waveguide Grating
by Zihao Yu, Degui Sun, Mingqi Bi, Yue Sun and Shuning Guo
Coatings 2026, 16(1), 63; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16010063 - 6 Jan 2026
Viewed by 536
Abstract
Silicon–nitride (SiN) waveguides have emerged as fundamental building blocks in silicon photonic integrated circuits (Si-PICs), offering advantages that compensate for the intrinsic limitations of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) and silica-on-silicon (SOS) platforms. In this work, two sizes of single-mode SiN strip waveguides are investigated: (i) [...] Read more.
Silicon–nitride (SiN) waveguides have emerged as fundamental building blocks in silicon photonic integrated circuits (Si-PICs), offering advantages that compensate for the intrinsic limitations of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) and silica-on-silicon (SOS) platforms. In this work, two sizes of single-mode SiN strip waveguides are investigated: (i) 600 nm wide strip waveguide cores on a 400 nm thick Si3N4 film and (ii) 1.0 µm wide strip waveguide cores on a 1.0 µm thick Si3N4 film. First, we design two AWG architectures and develop a generalized theoretical model for one of the key specifications—polarization mode dispersion (PMD)—by considering a pair of orthogonal polarization states in these two waveguides. Then, as the two-size SiN waveguides are generally fabricated via multiple operating processes of coating, photolithography, and etching, we investigate the dependences of PMD performances on the device errors of the two AWG architectures caused by the coating/manufacturing qualities and accuracies, and the dependences of PMD performance on the refractive index errors of the waveguide core. As a consequence, the softwaretool simulations for the two AWG architectures of 40-channel 0.8 nm channelspacing show that the average PMDs of the above two waveguide sizes are <0.50 ps and <0.35 ps, respectively, and the PMD responses to the ±10% fabrication error are < ±0.20 ps and ±10% fluctuation, respectively, but the ±2.5% variations have no obvious impacts upon the PMD performance. Therefore, it turns out that the PMD performance of a smaller waveguide has a relatively strong error sensitivity to the AWG architecture, while the larger waveguide size has a relatively weak error sensitivity to the AWG architecture. Full article
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