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Creators/Authors contains: "Bai, Jing"

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  1. Abstract Polarimetric imaging has a wide range of applications for uncovering features invisible to human eyes and conventional imaging sensors. Chip-integrated, fast, cost-effective, and accurate full-Stokes polarimetric imaging sensors are highly desirable in many applications, which, however, remain elusive due to fundamental material limitations. Here we present a chip-integratedMetasurface-based Full-StokesPolarimetricImaging sensor (MetaPolarIm) realized by integrating an ultrathin (~600 nm) metasurface polarization filter array (MPFA) onto a visible imaging sensor with CMOS compatible fabrication processes. The MPFA is featured with broadband dielectric-metal hybrid chiral metasurfaces and double-layer nanograting polarizers. This chip-integrated polarimetric imaging sensor enables single-shot full-Stokes imaging (speed limited by the CMOS imager) with the most compact form factor, records high measurement accuracy, dual-color operation (green and red) and a field of view up to 40 degrees. MetaPolarIm holds great promise to enable transformative applications in autonomous vision, industry inspection, space exploration, medical imaging and diagnosis. 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Plasmonic chiral metamaterials have attracted broad research interest because of their potential applications in optical communication, biomedical diagnosis, polarization imaging, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. However, optical losses in plasmonic structures severely limit practical applications. Here, we present the design concept and experimental demonstration for highly efficient subwavelength-thick plasmonic chiral metamaterials with strong chirality. The proposed designs utilize plasmonic metasurfaces to control the phase and polarization of light and exploit anisotropic thin-film interference effects to enhance optical chirality while minimizing optical loss. Based on such design concepts, we demonstrated experimentally optical devices such as circular polarization filters with transmission efficiency up to 90% and extinction ratio >180, polarization converters with conversion efficiency up to 90%, as well as on-chip integrated microfilter arrays for full Stokes polarization detection with high accuracy over a broad wavelength range (3.5–5 μm). The proposed design concepts are applicable from near-infrared to Terahertz regions via structural engineering. 
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  3. null (Ed.)
    Plasmonic chiral metamaterials have attracted broad research interest because of their potential applications in optical communication, biomedical diagnosis, polarization imaging, and circular dichroism spectroscopy. However, optical losses in plasmonic structures severely limit practical applications. Here, we present the design concept and experimental demonstration for highly efficient subwavelength-thick plasmonic chiral metamaterials with strong chirality. The proposed designs utilize plasmonic metasurfaces to control the phase and polarization of light and exploit anisotropic thin-film interference effects to enhance optical chirality while minimizing optical loss. Based on such design concepts, we demonstrated experimentally optical devices such as circular polarization filters with transmission efficiency up to 90% and extinction ratio >180, polarization converters with conversion efficiency up to 90%, as well as on-chip integrated microfilter arrays for full Stokes polarization detection with high accuracy over a broad wavelength range (3.5–5 μm). The proposed design concepts are applicable from near-infrared to Terahertz regions via structural engineering. 
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  4. null (Ed.)
    Solid-state nanopore sensors have broad applications from single-molecule biosensing to diagnostics and sequencing. Prevalent nanopore sensors are fabricated on silicon (Si) substrates through micromachining, however, the high capacitive noise resulting from Si conductivity has seriously limited both their sensing accuracy and recording speed. A new approach is proposed here for forming nanopore membranes on insulating sapphire wafers by anisotropic wet etching of sapphire through micro-patterned triangular masks. Reproducible formation of small membranes with an average dimension of ~10 μm are demonstrated. For validation, a sapphire-supported (SaS) nanopore chip, with a 100 times larger membrane area than silicon-supported (SiS) nanopore, showed 130 times smaller capacitance (10 pF) and ~2.5 times smaller rootmean-square (RMS) noise current (~20 pA over 100 kHz bandwidth). Tested with 1k bp double-stranded DNA, the SaS nanopore enabled sensing at microsecond speed with a signal-to-noise ratio of 21, compared to 11 from a SiS nanopore. This SaS nanopore presents a manufacturable platform feasible for biosensing as well as a wide variety of MEMS applications. 
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  5. null (Ed.)
  6. Abstract In conventional optical microscopes, image contrast of objects mainly results from the differences in light intensity and/or color. Muller matrix optical microscopes (MMMs), on the other hand, can provide significantly enhanced image contrast and rich information about objects by analyzing their interactions with polarized light. However, state‐of‐the‐art MMMs are fundamentally limited by bulky and slow polarization state generators and analyzers. Here, the study demonstrates a metasurface‐based MMM, i.e., Meta‐MMM, which is equipped with a chip‐integrated, single‐shot metasurface polarization state analyzer (Meta‐PSA). The Meta‐MMM is featured with high‐speed measurement (≈2s per Muller matrix (MM) image), superior operation stability, dual‐color operation, and high measurement accuracy (measurement error 1–2%) for MM imaging. The Meta‐MMM is applied to nanostructure characterization, surface morphology analysis, and discovering birefringent structures in honeybee wings. The Meta‐MMMs hold the promise to revolutionize various applications from biological imaging, medical diagnosis, and material characterization to industry inspection and space exploration. 
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