Bioinspired whisker arrays can work as antennae to detect sources of flow disturbances under water or in the air

Science Daily  July 20, 2022 Previous behavioral research on live sea lions showed that the whisker system and the animal’s neural processing is seemingly able to detect the Direction of Arrival (DoA) from just one side of the heads vibrissal pads. Therefore, temporal differences between whisker stimulation are a likely method for determining the angle. Researchers in the UK developed a theoretical model based on multilateration and tested by experimental studies on a 2D array of bio-inspired whiskers with regular spacing, and a 3D array of bio-inspired whiskers on a model head of a sea lion, as used in their […]

The handedness of light holds the key to better optical control

Phys.org   July 18, 2022 Current optical modulators used to manipulate the properties of a beam of light mainly use electrical or acoustic effects. These technologies can control the properties of light at nanosecond speeds. Researchers in Finland have developed an all-optical modulator technique which uses a coherent optical process. It can work at femtosecond speeds. They experimentally validated the concept in monolayer materials (MoS2) with modulation depth approaching ~100%, ultra-fast modulation speed (<~130 fs), and wavelength-independence features. The power and polarization of the incident optical beams can be used to tune the output chirality and modulation performance. According to the researchers […]

How ultrathin polymer films can be used for storage technology

Phys. org  July 18, 2022 Researchers in Germany showed that precisely applied mechanical pressure can improve the electronic properties of a widely used ferroelectric semi-crystalline polymer material polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF). However, PVDF’s structure, unlike crystals, is not completely ordered. They discovered that atomic force microscopy can be used to establish a certain electric order in the material. They scanned the material sample with a tip only a few nanometers in size. Using a laser they measured, evaluated the vibrations that were produced, and analyzed the material’s surface structure at the nano level. They discovered that this also changed the electrical […]

Key material development for fusion energy application

Phys.org  July 22, 2022 In a review paper a team of researchers in China has introduced the latest development and strategy on fusion energy in China and reviewed the progresses of reduced activation ferritic/martensitic (RAFM) steel for engineering applications. It is considered to be the primary candidate structural material for blankets of ITER, CFETR and DEMO. Several RAFMs have been developed in China (CN-RAFMs) such as CLAM, CLF-1, modified RAFMs and oxide dispersion strengthened RAFMs (ODS-RAFMs). The mechanical properties, irradiation behaviors, additive manufacturing and joining technologies of structural materials have been comprehensively studied. Qualifications of CN-RAFMs are on-going for ITER-TBM […]

Photovoltaics: Fully scalable all-perovskite tandem solar modules

Science Daily  July 14, 2022 Researchers in Germany have developed a prototype for fully scalable all-perovskite tandem solar modules which have an efficiency of up to 19.1 percent with an aperture area of 12.25 square centimeters. The improved efficiency was realized with optimized light paths, high-throughput laser scribing, and the use of established industrial coating methods. Perovskite solar cells with a tunable band gap are ideal tandem partners for solar cells made of other materials and for all-perovskite tandem solar cells. They were able to scale up individual perovskite cells with an efficiency of up to 23.5 percent .They feature […]

Physicists harness quantum ‘time reversal’ to measure vibrating atoms

Phys.org  July 14, 2022 Linear quantum measurements with independent particles are bounded by the standard quantum limit, which limits the precision achievable in estimating unknown phase parameters. The standard quantum limit can be overcome by entangling the particles, but the sensitivity is often limited by the final state readout, especially for complex entangled many-body states with non-Gaussian probability distributions. By implementing an effective time-reversal protocol in an optically engineered many-body spin Hamiltonian a team of researchers in the US (MIT, Harvard University) has demonstrated a quantum measurement with non-Gaussian states with performance beyond the limit of the readout scheme. This […]

A quantum wave in two crystals

Phys.org  July 18, 2022 In a crystal, all atoms are connected to each other and have a fixed spatial relationship to each other—so you can minimize the influence of external disturbances on the neutron wave. But this monolithic design limits the possibilities. Alignment of two crystals to create a neutron interferometer did not reach the required accuracy. Scanning X-ray interferometers also consist of separate silicon crystals and are similarly sensitive. An international team of researchers (Austria, France, Italy) used the technology developed for the X-ray interferometer. The team succeeded in detecting neutron interference in a system of two separate crystals. […]

Researchers create order from quantum chaos

Phys.org  July 19, 2022 A team of researchers in the US (National Energy Research Laboratory, University of Colorado, University of Kentucky) selected a tetracenethiophene compound called TES TIPS-TT, which has a crystal structure in which all molecules share a common axis. Using time-resolved paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy they characterized the spin state of the electrons in the material. The observed spin sublevel populations are consistent with predictions from the JDE model, including preferential 5TT0 formation at z ‖ B0, with one caveat—two 5TT spin sublevels have little to no population. This may be due to crossings between the 5TT and 3TT […]

Researchers explore a hydrodynamic semiconductor where electrons flow like water

Phys.org   July 20, 2022 An international team of researchers (USA – Columbia University, Cornell University, Brown University, Singapore, Japan) combined theoretical and experimental study of ambipolar hydrodynamic transport in bilayer graphene to demonstrate that the conductivity is given by the sum of two Drude-like terms that describe relative motion between electrons and holes, and the collective motion of the electron-hole plasma. As predicted, the measured conductivity of gapless, charge-neutral bilayer graphene was sample- and temperature-independent over a wide range. Away from neutrality, the electron-hole conductivity collapsed to a single curve, and a set of just four fitting parameters provided quantitative […]

Researchers present anti-reflective coating that blocks waves of many types

Phys.org  July 14, 2022 An international team of researchers (Austria, France) has developed a method that allows the calculation of a tailor-made anti-reflective structure which can be used to design an additional layer to the medium only partially permeable to a wireless signal so that the entire signal can be channeled through the medium without reflections. To determine the anti-reflective structure they sent the waves through the medium and measured exactly in which way these waves are reflected by the material. Using a mathematical technique they calculated the corresponding compensating structure so that the combination of both media allowed the […]