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Search Results (1,147)

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17 pages, 9258 KB  
Article
Synergistic Suppression of Secondary Electron Yield from Al2O3 Ceramic Windows by TiN Film and Laser Surface Texturing
by Baolong Ma, Shixi Chen, Chen Chen, Fanxi Zhang, Yaru Wang, Yixin Si, Jinglun Li, Jinghe Yang, Haipeng Li, Sheng Wang and Yupeng Xie
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(9), 513; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16090513 (registering DOI) - 24 Apr 2026
Viewed by 357
Abstract
To suppress the Secondary Electron Yield (SEY) of Al2O3 ceramic surfaces for accelerator ceramic windows, a synergistic strategy integrating TiN film deposition and laser surface texturing was developed. TiN films were first deposited on Al2O3 substrates by [...] Read more.
To suppress the Secondary Electron Yield (SEY) of Al2O3 ceramic surfaces for accelerator ceramic windows, a synergistic strategy integrating TiN film deposition and laser surface texturing was developed. TiN films were first deposited on Al2O3 substrates by pulsed DC magnetron sputtering, and the sputtering power was optimized through systematic characterization of the film morphology and chemical states, with 300 W identified as the optimal deposition condition. Laser surface texturing was then introduced to construct micro-structured Al2O3 surfaces with different geometrical features. Among the investigated laser powers, the 12 W-treated surface exhibited the most developed surface morphology and the highest roughness, indicating the most favorable topography for electron trapping. SEY measurements showed that the maximum SEY decreased from 8.2 for the as-received Al2O3 to 5.5 after deposition of a 10 nm TiN film, and was further reduced to 2.1, 1.0, and 1.7 for the textured TiN/Al2O3 surfaces prepared at 6, 12, and 18 W, respectively, with the best suppression for the 12 W textured TiN/Al2O3. The enhanced performance is attributed to the synergistic effect of low-SEY TiN surface chemistry and geometrical electron trapping induced by laser texturing. This work provides an effective route for constructing low-SEY Al2O3 ceramic surfaces for beam-window-related applications. Full article
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24 pages, 2353 KB  
Review
Pulsed Diode-Pumped Alkali Vapor Lasers: State of the Art, Open Challenges, and Future Architectures
by Wenning Xu, Rongqing Tan and Zhiyong Li
Photonics 2026, 13(5), 411; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13050411 - 23 Apr 2026
Viewed by 141
Abstract
Diode-pumped alkali vapor lasers (DPALs) offer high quantum efficiency, low thermal loading, excellent beam quality, and emission wavelengths matched to important application scenarios. Extending DPALs toward pulsed regimes is of particular interest for applications such as lidar, free-space optical communication, and precision material [...] Read more.
Diode-pumped alkali vapor lasers (DPALs) offer high quantum efficiency, low thermal loading, excellent beam quality, and emission wavelengths matched to important application scenarios. Extending DPALs toward pulsed regimes is of particular interest for applications such as lidar, free-space optical communication, and precision material processing, where high peak power and flexible temporal control are required. This review surveys the key technologies underlying DPAL systems and summarizes the progress in pulsed-generation approaches. The pulsed techniques reported to date are systematically reviewed, including pump modulation, intracavity modulation, cavity dumping, and mode-locking, together with a comparison of their performance. The current status indicates that pulsed DPALs remain at an early stage, with limitations in parameter space exploration and performance scaling. Future developments are expected along several directions, including further exploration of mode-locked DPALs, burst-mode pulse generation for structured temporal output, power scaling through MOPA architectures, and spectral extension via nonlinear frequency conversion. These directions collectively define the pathway toward high-performance pulsed DPAL systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Laser Technology and Applications, 2nd Edition)
27 pages, 8631 KB  
Article
From Light Pulses to Selective Enhancement: Performance Analysis of Event-Based Object Detection Under Pulsed Automotive Headlight Illumination
by Leonard Haensel and Torsten Bertram
Sensors 2026, 26(9), 2595; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26092595 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 471
Abstract
Pulse-width-modulated (PWM) automotive headlights enhance nighttime event-based camera detection, yet systematic parameter optimization for vulnerable road user detection remains unexplored. This study evaluates PWM frequency, duty cycle, light distribution, ego-vehicle speed, and ambient lighting under European New Car Assessment Programme-inspired crossing scenarios for [...] Read more.
Pulse-width-modulated (PWM) automotive headlights enhance nighttime event-based camera detection, yet systematic parameter optimization for vulnerable road user detection remains unexplored. This study evaluates PWM frequency, duty cycle, light distribution, ego-vehicle speed, and ambient lighting under European New Car Assessment Programme-inspired crossing scenarios for cyclist and pedestrian detection. Results establish performance ranging from substantial improvements to severe degradation relative to continuous illumination. Cyclist detection achieves robust performance with high-frequency modulation across light distributions, while low-frequency operation with low beam produces severe degradation through background noise accumulation. Pedestrian detection requires high beam with street lighting enabled; low beam universally fails regardless of modulation parameters. Limited parameter combinations achieve simultaneous improvements for both targets. Detection performs optimally on retroreflective surfaces, while low-reflectivity clothing limits capability, requiring target-specific optimization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Event-Driven Vision Sensor Architectures and Application Scenarios)
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29 pages, 3906 KB  
Review
Advanced Dual-Wavelength and Dual-Frequency VECSEL Architectures: Design Principles and Application-Driven Performance Metrics
by Léa Chaccour
Photonics 2026, 13(5), 404; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13050404 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 279
Abstract
Vertical-External-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers (VECSELs) have gained significant attention over the past two decades due to their versatility in a wide range of photonic applications. This review focuses on VECSEL configurations for dual-wavelength emission, highlighting their use in high-resolution spectroscopy, terahertz (THz) generation, and [...] Read more.
Vertical-External-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers (VECSELs) have gained significant attention over the past two decades due to their versatility in a wide range of photonic applications. This review focuses on VECSEL configurations for dual-wavelength emission, highlighting their use in high-resolution spectroscopy, terahertz (THz) generation, and advanced optical communication. We explore recent developments in VECSEL designs, including systems utilizing birefringent crystals for polarization-based frequency separation and configurations with dual-VECSEL chips or dual-gain regions within a single cavity. These two-wavelength VECSELs enable diverse operation modes, including narrow-linewidth, pulsed, multimode, and frequency-converted emission, with high-brightness output, excellent beam quality, and tunable wavelengths. Additionally, the review discusses advancements in dual-frequency VECSELs, with applications in LIDAR systems for environmental monitoring, highly stable optical clocks, and fiber sensors. We examine improvements in cavity design, semiconductor structures, and power stabilization, which have enhanced frequency stability and spectral purity, making VECSELs suitable for precision metrology and sensing applications. Full article
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16 pages, 4387 KB  
Article
Effects of Preheating on Internal Modification and Welding Strength of Glass by Ultrafast Laser Pulses
by Rafid Hussein and Shuting Lei
Micromachines 2026, 17(5), 507; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17050507 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 173
Abstract
Glass preheating prior to laser scanning is expected to enhance internal modification morphology; however, its effect on weld seam topology and welding strength have not been investigated. In the current work, the effects of preheating on ultrafast laser (184 fs and 10 ps) [...] Read more.
Glass preheating prior to laser scanning is expected to enhance internal modification morphology; however, its effect on weld seam topology and welding strength have not been investigated. In the current work, the effects of preheating on ultrafast laser (184 fs and 10 ps) internal modification and welding strength of borosilicate glass slides are investigated. For the internal modification experiments, pulse energy of 30–100 µJ and repetition rate of 10 kHz are used by focusing a laser beam at the interface of optically contacted slides at room temperature (RT ≈ 23 °C), 150 and 200 °C. Welding is conducted by a pulse energy of 4.5–18 µJ and repetition rate of 200 kHz using pre-clamped glass slides with a scanning speed of 10 mm/s at RT and 150 °C. Also, for welding, the optimum number of scans and hatching spacing are identified. Filamentation experiments show that discoloration is not significant when preheat temperature reaches 200 °C. Compared to 10 ps, pulse duration of 184 fs can produce a 19% narrower plasma-modified region at both RT and 150 °C and a 13% wider heat-affected zone at 150 °C. Welding using optimum conditions of 5 scans and 200 µm hatch, and “crack-free” laser parameters produces an average strength of: 50 ± 3.2 MPa at RT and 40 ± 2 MPa at 150 °C for 184 fs compared to 35 MPa at RT and 32 MPa at 150 °C for 10 ps, using 10 replicates each. However, the welding strength upon preheating to 150 °C using 184 fs is still 25% higher compared to average reported laser welding bonding strength, while the 10 ps strength is within the reported average. The enhanced welding strength for 184 fs can be attributed to reduced microcracking, especially when “crack free” combinations are utilized. Full article
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17 pages, 7609 KB  
Article
Plasma Physics-Based Deep Learning Modeling for Accurate Morphology Prediction in Femtosecond Bessel Laser Processing of ZnS
by Yifan Deng, Jingya Sun, Manlou Ye, Xiaokang Dong, Xiang Li and Yang Yang
Photonics 2026, 13(4), 394; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13040394 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 331
Abstract
Femtosecond laser processing has become a powerful approach for high-precision micro- and nanofabrication in transparent materials, owing to its ultrashort pulse duration and minimized thermal effects. However, the limited predictability of processing depth remains a major obstacle to practical applications. Here, we present [...] Read more.
Femtosecond laser processing has become a powerful approach for high-precision micro- and nanofabrication in transparent materials, owing to its ultrashort pulse duration and minimized thermal effects. However, the limited predictability of processing depth remains a major obstacle to practical applications. Here, we present a morphology prediction framework for femtosecond Bessel laser processing of ZnS that integrates plasma physics modeling with deep learning. Through combined experimental measurements and plasma physics simulations, the influence of laser pulse energy on electron density evolution and material removal depth is systematically investigated. The results reveal the dominant roles of multiphoton ionization, avalanche ionization, and free-electron dynamics in deep-volume processing, and demonstrate the strong sensitivity of the processing morphology to the plasma distribution. Conventional plasma models can accurately reproduce the ablation diameter, yet exhibit significant limitations in predicting the processing depth. We propose a physics data-based framework for femtosecond Bessel beam processing, which integrates a depth-residual regression network conditioned on the peak electron density distribution to effectively learn and compensate for systematic modeling errors in plasma-based simulations. This strategy leads to excellent agreement between predicted and experimental processing depths and three-dimensional morphologies under various energy conditions. The model achieves a mean absolute error (MAE) of 4.9 nm at the pixel level for 3D crater reconstruction. Under rigorous crater-grouped cross-validation with Leave-One-Group-Out evaluation, the model achieves a mean R2 of 0.74 across 8 independent craters, demonstrating reliable generalization to unseen energy conditions. These results demonstrate that incorporating physical priors into data-driven learning provides an effective pathway to overcoming accuracy limitations in modeling complex laser–matter interactions. This approach offers a reliable tool for quantitative prediction and parameter optimization in deep femtosecond laser processing of transparent materials and enabling highly controllable and reproducible micro- and nanofabrication for advanced photonic and three-dimensional optical applications. Full article
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20 pages, 4688 KB  
Article
Neutral-Axis Ti3C2Tx/GO Sandwich Sensor with Bending Immunity and Deep Learning Tactile Recognition
by Jiahao Qi, Tianshun Gong and Debo Wang
Sensors 2026, 26(8), 2471; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26082471 - 17 Apr 2026
Viewed by 164
Abstract
Flexible piezoresistive sensors are often vulnerable to modal ambiguity and bending-induced drift, both of which can obscure true pressure and strain signals under practical operation. Here, we address these limitations by suppressing bending sensitivity at the device level and disambiguating tactile modes at [...] Read more.
Flexible piezoresistive sensors are often vulnerable to modal ambiguity and bending-induced drift, both of which can obscure true pressure and strain signals under practical operation. Here, we address these limitations by suppressing bending sensitivity at the device level and disambiguating tactile modes at the algorithmic level. We propose and fabricate a Ti3C2Tx/graphene oxide (GO) sandwich sensor in which the conductive network is positioned near the neutral axis, thereby ensuring that bending induces negligible axial strain in the active layer. In contrast, out-of-plane pressing enlarges microcontacts, while in-plane stretching disrupts percolation pathways. We develop a composite-beam model to quantify neutral-axis alignment and the resultant bending immunity, realize the device via a straightforward casting process, and systematically characterize its electromechanical response under bending, pressing, nail pressing, and stretching. To further reduce modal ambiguity and improve tactile recognition, a lightweight one-dimensional convolutional neural network (1D-CNN) was introduced to classify temporal resistance signals from the sensor. Experimental results showed that the 1D-CNN achieved a high classification accuracy of 98.52% under flat-state training and testing conditions, and maintained 96.67% accuracy when evaluated on bending-state samples, demonstrating strong robustness against bending-induced interference. Together, the neutral-axis device architecture and the learning-based inference pipeline deliver high sensitivity to pressing and stretching while markedly suppressing the response to bending, thereby enabling wrist-worn pulse monitoring, soft-robotic joint sensing, and plantar pressure insoles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sensors)
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20 pages, 6734 KB  
Article
Time-Scale Mismatch as a Fundamental Constraint in Quantum Beam–Matter Interactions
by Abbas Alshehabi
Quantum Beam Sci. 2026, 10(2), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/qubs10020010 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 270
Abstract
Quantum beams-including X-rays, synchrotron radiation, electrons, neutrons, ions, and ultrafast photon sources-are indispensable tools for probing the structure, dynamics, and electronic properties of matter. The excitation time scale τexc is defined operationally as the characteristic temporal interval governing externally imposed [...] Read more.
Quantum beams-including X-rays, synchrotron radiation, electrons, neutrons, ions, and ultrafast photon sources-are indispensable tools for probing the structure, dynamics, and electronic properties of matter. The excitation time scale τexc is defined operationally as the characteristic temporal interval governing externally imposed energy deposition events within the interaction volume, such as pulse duration, bunch spacing, or beam dwell time. Interpretation of beam–matter interactions has traditionally relied on steady-state or quasi-equilibrium assumptions, implicitly presuming that intrinsic material relaxation processes can accommodate externally imposed excitation. Recent advances in high-brightness synchrotron sources, X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs), and pulsed electron beams increasingly operate in regimes where this assumption is strained, and systematic nonequilibrium effects, radiation damage, and irreversible transformations are reported even under routine experimental conditions. This work examines the role of time-scale mismatch between beam-driven energy deposition and intrinsic material relaxation as a governing constraint in beam–matter interactions. Analyzing the hierarchy of excitation, electronic relaxation, phonon coupling, and thermal diffusion time scales, the analysis introduces a dimensionless mismatch parameter Λ=τrelτexc, which quantifies the competition between externally imposed excitation and intrinsic relaxation processes in beam–matter interactions. The resulting framework provides a unified physical interpretation of beam-induced damage, signal distortion, dose dependence, and nonlinear response across quantum beam modalities, framing these effects as consequences of forced nonequilibrium dynamics rather than technique-specific artifacts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Radiation Scattering Fundamentals and Theory)
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28 pages, 1836 KB  
Article
Radiation-Induced Changes in Antibiotic Residues, Amino Acid Profiles, and Fatty Acid Composition of Poultry Meat Under Electron-Beam Irradiation: Implications for Sustainable Food Production
by Raushangul Uazhanova, Igor Danko, Maxat Iztileuov, Gaukhar Jamanbayeva and Maxat Toishimanov
Agriculture 2026, 16(7), 796; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16070796 - 3 Apr 2026
Viewed by 438
Abstract
The increasing occurrence of antibiotic residues in poultry meat represents a serious food safety concern associated with antimicrobial resistance and potential risks to human health. This study investigated the effects of electron beam irradiation on antibiotic residues and nutritional quality parameters of poultry [...] Read more.
The increasing occurrence of antibiotic residues in poultry meat represents a serious food safety concern associated with antimicrobial resistance and potential risks to human health. This study investigated the effects of electron beam irradiation on antibiotic residues and nutritional quality parameters of poultry meat. All experiments and data collection were carried out in 2025. Fresh poultry samples were irradiated using an ILU-10 pulsed linear electron accelerator at doses of 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 kGy. Antibiotic residues were determined by HPLC-DAD, amino acid composition was analyzed using HPLC, and fatty acid profiles were evaluated by gas chromatography. Electron beam irradiation produced significant dose-dependent changes in the chemical composition of poultry meat. Total amino acid content decreased progressively with increasing irradiation dose, with reductions of up to 60–73% at 10 kGy depending on tissue type. Branched-chain and essential amino acids showed similar trends. Fatty acid analysis revealed a shift toward higher proportions of saturated fatty acids and a decline in monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids. The PUFA/SFA ratio decreased from 0.48 in control samples to 0.25 at 10 kGy. Tetracycline residues were not detected in any samples, whereas chloramphenicol residues were present in control meat but were progressively reduced after irradiation and became undetectable at doses ≥ 8 kGy. These results demonstrate that electron beam irradiation can effectively reduce antibiotic residues in poultry meat; however, higher irradiation doses may significantly alter amino acid and lipid composition. Therefore, optimization of irradiation parameters is necessary to balance improvements in food safety with the preservation of nutritional quality for the production of safe and sustainable food products. Optimization of irradiation parameters is therefore necessary to balance food safety benefits with preservation of nutritional quality. Furthermore, this research contributes to the achievement of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2, while the obtained results also support SDG 3 by promoting safer food systems and protecting public health. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Product Quality and Safety)
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18 pages, 3889 KB  
Article
Proposal of Difference-Frequency Wave Generation Induced by Dual-Wavelength Free-Electron Laser Oscillations
by Norihiro Sei, Takeshi Sakai, Heishun Zen and Hideaki Ohgaki
Photonics 2026, 13(4), 344; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13040344 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 527
Abstract
Optical klystrons have been developed in storage ring free-electron lasers (FELs) as insertion devices to increase the FEL gain in a straight section with limited length. By adjusting the magnetic field in the dispersion section of the optical klystron to shift the relative [...] Read more.
Optical klystrons have been developed in storage ring free-electron lasers (FELs) as insertion devices to increase the FEL gain in a straight section with limited length. By adjusting the magnetic field in the dispersion section of the optical klystron to shift the relative delay between the electron bunch and FEL pulse from an integer multiple of the FEL wavelength, FELs can oscillate at two wavelengths. The electron density of the electron bunch that interacts with the FEL pulse in a small-signal regime is modulated at the FEL wavelength period. When the FEL oscillates simultaneously at two wavelengths, the electron density of the electron bunch beats through the modulation with two periods. This beat generates long-wavelength coherent edge radiation at a bending magnet located in the straight section containing the optical klystron. Difference-frequency waves induced by dual-wavelength ultraviolet free-electron lasers generate a high-intensity mid-infrared monochromatic beam. Our findings will lay the foundation for the development of the difference-frequency waves of soft X-rays and extreme ultraviolet light using hard X-ray FELs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Lasers, Light Sources and Sensors)
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21 pages, 5219 KB  
Article
NDT-Based Condition Assessment and Structural Safety Evaluation of a Reinforced Cement Concrete Water Tank in a Coastal Region: A Case Study
by Marakkath Nidhi, Praveena Jagatheesan and Shimol Philip
Infrastructures 2026, 11(4), 121; https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures11040121 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 437
Abstract
Reinforced cement concrete (RCC) water tanks are essential for water storage and distribution facilities in every region. The durability and structural integrity of RCC water tanks are crucial to maintaining an uninterrupted water supply to the surrounding areas. This study evaluates the structural [...] Read more.
Reinforced cement concrete (RCC) water tanks are essential for water storage and distribution facilities in every region. The durability and structural integrity of RCC water tanks are crucial to maintaining an uninterrupted water supply to the surrounding areas. This study evaluates the structural integrity and functionality of a water tank in Karaikal, a coastal region in the Union Territory of Puducherry, India, subject to severe exposure conditions characterized by high humidity and temperature variability. An RCC water tank with a capacity of 10 lakh L in Thirunallar, Karaikal, is considered in this study. The methodology for the condition assessment includes visual inspection, non-destructive testing (NDT), and structural analysis in STAAD PRO software. NDT, including the Schmidt rebound hammer test and ultrasonic pulse velocity (UPV) test, was employed to evaluate the indicative compressive strength and in situ quality of an RCC water tank. The structure was modelled using structural drawings obtained from the Public Works Department, Karaikal. The NDT testing findings were incorporated into the model, and the structure was analyzed. Finally, the induced stress from the STAAD Pro model was compared with the in situ concrete compressive strength to assess the tank’s structural safety. The rebound hammer test results indicate that the in situ compressive strength of the tank’s beams and columns ranges from 12 MPa to 43 MPa, and the STAAD Pro analysis shows induced stresses ranging from 2.42 to 10.59 MPa. The comparison shows that the structure has higher safety margins. Hence, the deterioration observed during the visual inspection was not due to a deficiency in structural strength but rather to durability issues caused by environmental distress. Finally, suitable repair and rehabilitation methods were recommended to mitigate the deterioration based upon NDT measurements and the outputs of the structural analysis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Infrastructures Inspection and Maintenance)
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19 pages, 5205 KB  
Article
High-Frequency Ultrasound Focusing Using Low-Cost PMMA and PDMS Acoustic Lenses
by Mohammadamir Ghasemishabankareh, Zeyuan Hui, Francesc Torres and Núria Barniol
Micromachines 2026, 17(4), 414; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi17040414 - 28 Mar 2026
Viewed by 463
Abstract
This study presents a high-frequency ultrasound lens system that uses simply fabricated and low-cost acoustic lenses made from PMMA and PDMS materials. These lenses are designed for higher-frequency operation around 20 MHz, providing suitability for demanding high-frequency ultrasonic applications. They were designed and [...] Read more.
This study presents a high-frequency ultrasound lens system that uses simply fabricated and low-cost acoustic lenses made from PMMA and PDMS materials. These lenses are designed for higher-frequency operation around 20 MHz, providing suitability for demanding high-frequency ultrasonic applications. They were designed and fabricated specifically for integration with a PMUT array, ensuring proper compatibility with array-based high-frequency ultrasonic imaging. Both Fresnel and convex lens designs were evaluated through axial and lateral beam measurements, along with pulse–echo testing in the focal region. The results show that the PMMA and PDMS lenses can produce a well-defined focus and a stable echo response despite their simple and low-cost fabrication. This demonstrates the feasibility of low-cost materials for high-frequency ultrasonic focusing in PMUT array applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue MEMS Ultrasonic Transducers, 2nd Edition)
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8 pages, 2546 KB  
Communication
A 6 mJ, 4 ns Pulse Generation at 2.09 µm from a Diode-Pumped Ho:YAG Thin-Disk Laser
by Yuya Koshiba, Jiří Mužík, Martin Smrž, Matyáš Dvořák, Sabina Kudělková, Antonín Fajstavr and Tomáš Mocek
Photonics 2026, 13(3), 306; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13030306 - 21 Mar 2026
Viewed by 399
Abstract
A holmium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Ho:YAG) thin disk was experimentally investigated under Q-switching and cavity-dumping operation schemes, pumped by a 1.9 µm laser diode (LD). The laser generated pulses at 2090 nm with energies more than 6 mJ and pulse duration down to [...] Read more.
A holmium-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (Ho:YAG) thin disk was experimentally investigated under Q-switching and cavity-dumping operation schemes, pumped by a 1.9 µm laser diode (LD). The laser generated pulses at 2090 nm with energies more than 6 mJ and pulse duration down to 3.8 ns, corresponding to a peak power of 1.6 MW with near-diffraction-limited beam quality. The compact and robust system was used for laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) experiments, demonstrating its practical usability. These results represent, to the best of our knowledge, the first demonstration of a Ho:YAG thin-disk laser providing MW peak power in the nanosecond regime. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Laser Technology and Applications)
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31 pages, 3578 KB  
Review
Measurement of Percentage Depth–Dose Distributions in Clinical Dosimetry: Conventional Techniques and Emerging Sensor Technologies
by Giada Petringa, Luigi Raffaele, Giacomo Cuttone, Mariacristina Guarrera, Alma Kurmanova, Roberto Catalano and Giuseppe Antonio Pablo Cirrone
Sensors 2026, 26(6), 1908; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26061908 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 560
Abstract
Percentage depth–dose (PDD) distributions are fundamental to characterizing radiation beams in radiotherapy. This review provides an overview of both methods and sensor technologies for measuring PDD in photon, electron, proton, and carbon-ion beams. We summarize conventional dosimetry techniques, including water-phantom scanning with ionization [...] Read more.
Percentage depth–dose (PDD) distributions are fundamental to characterizing radiation beams in radiotherapy. This review provides an overview of both methods and sensor technologies for measuring PDD in photon, electron, proton, and carbon-ion beams. We summarize conventional dosimetry techniques, including water-phantom scanning with ionization chambers (cylindrical and parallel-plate) and radiochromic film, and discuss their strengths (established accuracy, calibration traceability) and limitations (volume averaging, delayed readout). We then examine emerging sensor technologies designed to improve spatial resolution, speed, and radiation hardness: multi-layer ionization chambers and Faraday cups for one-shot PDD acquisition; scintillator-based detectors (liquid, plastic, and fiber-optic) enabling real-time and high-resolution depth–dose measurements; advanced semiconductor detectors including silicon carbide diodes; as well as novel approaches such as ionoacoustic range sensing for proton beams. For each modality and detector type, we emphasize clinical relevance, measurement accuracy, spatial resolution, radiation durability, and suitability for high dose-per-pulse environments (e.g., FLASH radiotherapy). Current challenges, such as detector response in regions of steep dose gradient, saturation or recombination at ultra-high dose rates, and energy-dependent sensitivity in mixed radiation fields, are analyzed in detail. We also highlight the limitations of each technique and discuss ongoing improvements and prospects for clinical implementation. In summary, no single detector technology fully satisfies all requirements for fast, high-accuracy, high-resolution, radiation-hard PDD measurement, but the integration of emerging sensor innovations into clinical dosimetry promises to enhance the precision and efficiency of radiotherapy quality assurance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Sensors for Human Health Management)
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10 pages, 3337 KB  
Article
Study on Side-Pumping and Electro-Optical Q-Switched Laser Performance of a Novel Near-Infrared Laser Crystal Nd:GYSAG
by Jianling Gu, Haiyue Wang, Lei Huang, Qingli Zhang and Guihua Sun
Photonics 2026, 13(3), 284; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics13030284 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 376
Abstract
The Nd:GYSAG crystal enables multi-wavelength near-infrared laser output, with adjustable wavelengths tailored for specific application requirements, making it highly valuable for space-borne water vapor detection. This study reports, for the first time, the side-pumping characteristics and electro-optical Q-switching performance of this crystal. Using [...] Read more.
The Nd:GYSAG crystal enables multi-wavelength near-infrared laser output, with adjustable wavelengths tailored for specific application requirements, making it highly valuable for space-borne water vapor detection. This study reports, for the first time, the side-pumping characteristics and electro-optical Q-switching performance of this crystal. Using Ø3 × 73 mm and Ø4 × 73 mm crystal rods doped with 1.21 at.% Nd:GYSAG (chemical formula Nd0.033Gd0.93Y1.79Sc0.70Al4.54O11.99), 1060.4 nm laser output was achieved under 808 nm laser diode (LD) side-pumping at a repetition rate of 100 Hz and a pump pulse width of 250 μs. The experimental results show that the Ø4 × 73 mm rod had a higher laser threshold but exhibited significantly superior slope efficiency and maximum output power compared to the Ø3 × 73 mm rod. Using a flat–flat resonator, optimal laser performance was obtained with an output coupler transmission of 35%, yielding a slope efficiency of 37.2%. A maximum output energy of 179.4 mJ was achieved at a pump energy of 646 mJ. Thermal lensing effects were compensated using a flat–convex cavity, leading to improved laser performance and beam quality. Electro-optical Q-switching experiments were conducted using a KD*P crystal. A comparison between voltage-applied and voltage-removed Q-switching techniques revealed superior performance for the voltage-applied method. High-performance laser output was realized, achieving a maximum pulse energy of 59.6 mJ, a pulse width of 14.93 ns, and a peak power of 3.99 MW. This study provides an important foundation for the development of near-infrared laser devices based on Nd:GYSAG. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Lasers, Light Sources and Sensors)
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