Development of large area nanostructured AR coatings for EO/IR sensor applications

Author(s):  
Ashok K. Sood ◽  
Gopal Pethuraja ◽  
Adam W. Sood ◽  
Roger E. Welser ◽  
Yash R. Puri ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashok K. Sood ◽  
Gopal Pethuraja ◽  
Roger E. Welser ◽  
Yash R. Puri ◽  
Nibir K. Dhar ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashok K. Sood ◽  
Gopal Pethuraja ◽  
Adam W. Sood ◽  
Roger E. Welser ◽  
Yash R. Puri ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 1530 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bendavid ◽  
L. Wieczorek ◽  
R. Chai ◽  
J. S. Cooper ◽  
B. Raguse

ABSTRACTA large area nanogap electrode fabrication method combinig conventional lithography patterning with the of focused ion beam (FIB) is presented. Lithography and a lift-off process were used to pattern 50 nm thick platinum pads having an area of 300 μm × 300 μm. A range of 30-300 nm wide nanogaps (length from 300 μm to 10 mm ) were then etched using an FIB of Ga+ at an acceleration voltage of 30 kV at various beam currents. An investigation of Ga+ beam current ranging between 1-50 pA was undertaken to optimise the process for the current fabrication method. In this study, we used Monte Carlo simulation to calculate the damage depth in various materials by the Ga+. Calculation of the recoil cascades of the substrate atoms are also presented. The nanogap electrodes fabricated in this study were found to have empty gap resistances exceeding several hundred MΩ. A comparison of the gap length versus electrical resistance on glass substrates is presented. The results thus outline some important issues in low-conductance measurements. The proposed nanogap fabrication method can be extended to various sensor applications, such as chemical sensing, that employ the nanogap platform. This method may be used as a prototype technique for large-scale fabrication due to its simple, fast and reliable features.


Author(s):  
Venkatarao Selamneni ◽  
Aastha Dave ◽  
Pedja Mihailovic ◽  
Saroj Mondal ◽  
Parikshit Sahatiya

Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (18) ◽  
pp. 5188
Author(s):  
Tomi Koskinen ◽  
Taneli Juntunen ◽  
Ilkka Tittonen

Emergent applications in wearable electronics require inexpensive sensors suited to scalable manufacturing. This work demonstrates a large-area thermal sensor based on distributed thermocouple architecture and ink-based multilayer graphene film. The proposed device combines the exceptional mechanical properties of multilayer graphene nanocomposite with the reliability and passive sensing performance enabled by thermoelectrics. The Seebeck coefficient of the spray-deposited films revealed an inverse thickness dependence with the largest value of 44.7 μV K−1 at 78 nm, which makes thinner films preferable for sensor applications. Device performance was demonstrated by touch sensing and thermal distribution mapping-based shape detection. Sensor output voltage in the latter application was on the order of 300 μV with a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 35, thus enabling accurate detection of objects of different shapes and sizes. The results imply that films based on multilayer graphene ink are highly suitable to thermoelectric sensing applications, while the ink phase enables facile integration into existing fabrication processes.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Someya ◽  
T. Sakurai ◽  
T. Sekitani ◽  
H. Kawaguchi ◽  
S. Iba ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashok K. Sood ◽  
Roger E. Welser ◽  
Adam W. Sood ◽  
Yash R. Puri ◽  
David Poxson ◽  
...  

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