Semiconductor Metamaterials: Part 1 | Buch | 978-0-443-29686-4 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm

Semiconductor Metamaterials: Part 1

Buch, Englisch, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm

ISBN: 978-0-443-29686-4
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Technology


Semiconductor Metamaterials: Part One, Volume 116 in a two-part series surveys the state-of-the-art in material platforms for optical metasurfaces. Chapters cover Metasurfaces from materials with 2nd-order nonlinearity, Light Emitting Metasurfaces based on Direct Bandgap Semiconductors, Tunable Metasurfaces enabled by Phase-Change Materials, Phase-Transition Materials for Thermal Tuning of Metasurfaces, Tunable Metasurface Devices based on Soft Matter, Infrared Metasurfaces, Polarization Sensing Platforms, UV/ Visible Metasurfaces, and Metasurfaces for Catalysis & Chemistry.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Generate
1. Metasurfaces from materials with 2nd-order nonlinearity
Frank Setzpfandt, Anna Fedotova Fedotova, Maximilian Weißflog and Sina Saravi
2. Light Emitting Metasurfaces based on Direct Bandgap Semiconductors
Tuomas Haggren, Matthew Brian Parry and Wei Wen Wong

Tuning
3. Tunable Metasurfaces enabled by Phase-Change Materials
Martin Hafermann
4. Phase-Transition Materials for Thermal Tuning of Metasurfaces
Carsten Ronning
5. Tunable Metasurface Devices based on Soft Matter
Sarah Walden, Yana Izdebskaya and Ilya Shadrivov

Detect
6. Infrared Metasurfaces
Joseph Talghader, Avijit Das, Merlin Mah and John Hunt
7. Polarization Sensing Platforms
Jer-Shing Huang and Lin Zhan-Hong
8. UV/ Visible Metasurfaces
Kun Huang
9. Metasurfaces for Catalysis & Chemistry
Fiona J. Beck, Christin David, Zelio Fusco, Ning Lyu and Anjalie Edirisooriya


Hafermann, Martin
Dr. Martin Hafermann is a research associate at Friedrich Schiller University Jena where he explores the use of ion beams to modify various material platforms for enhanced optical applications. He earned his PhD in 2021 at FSU Jena investigating ion-beam modified phase-change materials for metasurfaces.

Walden, Sarah
Dr. Sarah Walden is a lecturer at Griffith University investigating tuneable nanophotonic devices using stimuli-responsive materials. In 2017 Sarah completed a PhD at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT), investigating the nonlinear optical properties of semiconductor nanoparticles. After her PhD, she became a Postdoctoral Fellow jointly between the Soft Matter Materials Laboratory at QUT and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), investigating new materials for photolithography. In 2022, Sarah commenced a Zukunfts Fellowship at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, where she applied stimuli-responsive polymers for tuneable metasurface devices.


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