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We report a highly efficient polariton organic light-emitting diode (POLED) based on an intracavity pumping architecture, where an absorbing J-aggregate dye film is used to generate polariton modes and a red fluorescent OLED is used for radiative pumping of emission from the lower polariton (LP) branch. To realize the device with large-area uniformity and adjustable coupling strength, we develop a spin-coating method to achieve high-quality J-aggregate thin films with controlled thickness and absorption. From systematic studies of the devices with different J-aggregate film thicknesses and OLED injection layers, we show that the J-aggregate film and the pump OLED play separate roles in determining the coupling strength and electroluminescence efficiency, and can be simultaneously optimized under a cavity design with a good LP-OLED emission overlap for effective radiative pumping. By increasing the absorption with thick J-aggregate film and improving the electron injection of pump OLED with Li2CO3 interlayer, we demonstrate the POLED with a large Rabi splitting energy of 192 meV and a maximum external quantum efficiency of 1.2%, a record efficiency of POLEDs reported so far. This POLED architecture can be generally applied for exploration of various organic materials to realize novel polariton devices and electrically pumped lasers.A multi-diffractive nanostructure is reported for the resonant excitation of surface plasmons that are cross-coupled through a thin metallic film. It consists of two superimposed periodic corrugations that allow diffraction excitation of surface plasmons on the inner side of a thin metal film and their subsequent phase matching with counterpropagating surface plasmons travelling to the opposite direction on its other side. This interaction leads to establishing of a set of cross-coupled Bragg-scattered surface plasmon modes that exhibit an electromagnetic field localized on both metal film interfaces. The reported structure is attractive for surface plasmon resonance biosensor applications, where direct optical probing can be done through the substrate without the need of optical matching to a high refractive index prism. In addition, it can be prepared by mass production - compatible means with UV-nanoimprint lithography and its biosensing performance characteristics are demonstrated by refractometric and biomolecular affinity binding studies.Dual frequency combs are emerging as highly effective channelizers for radio frequency (RF) signal processing, showing versatile capabilities in various applications including Fourier signal mapping, analog-to-digital conversion and sub-sampling of sparse wideband signals. Although previous research has considered the impact of comb power and harmonic distortions in individual systems, a rigorous and comprehensive performance analysis is lacking, particularly regarding the impact of phase noise. This is especially important considering that phase noise power increases quadratically with comb line number. In this paper, we develop a theoretical model of a dual frequency comb channelizer and evaluate the signal to noise ratio limits and design challenges when deploying such systems in a high bandwidth signal processing context. We show that the performance of these dual comb based signal processors is limited by the relative phase noise between the two optical frequency combs, which to our knowledge has not been considered in previous literature. Our simulations verify the theoretical model and examine the stochastic noise contributions and harmonic distortion, followed by a broader discussion of the performance limits of dual frequency comb channelizers, which demonstrate the importance of minimizing the relative phase noise between the two frequency combs to achieve high signal-to-noise ratio signal processing.Random lasing is an intriguing phenomenon occurring in disordered structures with optical gain in which light scattering provides the necessary feedback for lasing action. Unlike conventional lasers, random lasing systems emit in all directions due to light scattering. While this property can be desired in some cases, directional emission remains required for most applications. In a vertical microcavity containing the hybrid perovskite CH3NH3PbBr3, we report here the coupling of the emission of a random laser with a cavity polaritonic resonance, resulting in a directional random lasing, whose emission angles can be tuned by varying the cavity detuning and reach values as large as 15.8° and 22.4°.We present a compact optical design for a scalable trapped ion quantum processor employing a single high numerical aperture lens for the excitation of ions and collection of photons, both of which are essential for remote entanglement generation. We verified the design by performing a quantum interference experiment between two photons generated by two sets of the proposed design and observed a 82(3) % suppression of coincidence within 8.13 ns time window when the two photons became indistinguishable. This design can be extended for the simultaneous generation of multiple pairs of entangled qubits with existing fiber-array devices.Considering a coherent microscopy setup, influences of the substrate below the sample in the imaging performances are studied, with a focus on high refractive index substrate such as silicon. this website Analytical expression of 3D full-wave vectorial point spread function, i.e. the dyadic Green's function is derived for the optical setup together with the substrate. Numerical analysis are performed in order to understand and compare magnification, depth of field, and resolution when using silicon substrate versus the conventional glass substrate or usually modelled condition of no substrate. Novel insights are generated about the scope of resolution improvement due to near field effect of the silicon substrate. Importantly, we show that the expected resolution varies greatly with the position of the sources and the substrate interface relative to the focal plane. Both better and worse resolution as compared to glass substrate may be expected with small changes in their positions. Therefore, our studies show that deriving a single indicative number of expected resolution is neither possible nor judicious for the case of silicon substrate.Microsphere photolithography (MPL) is a fabrication technique that combines the ability to self-assemble arrays of microspheres with the ability of a microsphere to focus light to a photonic jet, in order to create highly ordered nanoscale features in photoresist. This paper presents a model of photoresist exposure with the photonic jet, combining a full-wave electromagnetic model of the microsphere/photoresist interaction with the sequential removal of exposed photoresist by the developer. The model is used to predict the dose curves for the MPL process based on the photoresist thickness, illumination conditions, and development time. After experimental validation, the model provides insight into the process including the resolution, sensitivity, and effects of off-normal illumination. This guides the fabrication of sub-100 nm hole/disk arrays using lift-off, and superposition is shown to predict the geometry for split-ring resonators created using multiple exposures. This model will assist synthesizing fabrication parameters to create large area scalable metasurfaces with sensing and energy management applications.3D lidar scene projector (LSP) plays an important role in the hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) simulation for autonomous driving system (ADS). It generates a simulated 3D lidar scene in laboratory by generating a 2D array of optical time delay signals. The reconfigurable optical time delay array (ROTDA) is crucial for LSP. However, current ROTDA solutions cannot support a LSP with a spatial resolution more than 10×10. In this paper, we proposed a novel ROTDA design based on the time slicing method. The optical signals with the same time delay but different spatial coordinates were treated as one time slice. Different time slices were superimposed into a composite image by a microlens-array-based imaging system to obtain a 3D lidar scene. And a spatial light modulator (SLM) was utilized to configure the time delay of each lidar scene pixel. We developed a ROTDA prototype with 64×64 pixels, each pixel can be reconfigured with up to 180 different time delays in one frame. The time delay resolution is 1 ns, the maximum time delay is 5000 s, and the 3D frame rate is 20Hz. The prototype can generate a continuous lidar scene with a distance span of 27 m, and can also generate up to 8 short scenes that are separated from each other along the lidar observation direction, each short scene covers a distance span of 3 m or 3.75 m. The design method proposed in this paper can also be applied to other occasions that demand a large number of time delay generators.X-ray phase contrast imaging is gaining importance as an imaging tool. However, it is common for X-ray phase detection techniques to be sensitive to the derivatives of the phase. Therefore, the integration of differential phase images is a fundamental step both to access quantitative pixel content and for further analysis such as segmentation. The integration of noisy data leads to artefacts with a severe impact on image quality and on its quantitative content. In this work, an integration method based on the Wiener filter is presented and tested using simulated and real data obtained with the edge illumination differential X-ray phase imaging method. The method is shown to provide high image quality while preserving the quantitative pixel content of the integrated image. In addition, it requires a short computational time making it suitable for large datasets.For any single anterior chamber cross-sectional (tomographic) imaging method, there is a practical compromise between image size and image resolution. In order to obtain large field-of-view cross-sectional images of the whole anterior chamber and high-resolution cross-sectional images of the fine corneal layers, measurements by multiple devices are currently required. This paper presents a novel raster scanning tomographic imaging device that acquires simultaneous large field-of-view Scheimpflug (12.5 mm image depth, 50 μm axial resolution in air) and high-resolution spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) (2 mm image depth, 3.7μm axial resolution in air) using the same illuminating photons. For the novel raster scanning 3D Scheimpflug imaging, a tunable lens system together with numerical methods for correcting refraction distortion were used. To demonstrate the capability of simultaneous measurement of both fine corneal layers and whole anterior chambers topology, ex vivo measurements on 12 porcine and 12 bovine eyes were carried out. There is a reasonable agreement in the overall central corneal thicknesses (CCT) obtained from the simultaneous SD-OCT and Scheimpflug measurements. In addition, because the same infrared light beam was used to illuminate the sample, both OCT and Scheimpflug images were taken at the exact same location of a sample simultaneously in a single measurement. This provides a unique method for measuring both the thickness and the refractive index of a sample.

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