Publication database
Cavitation Inception from Transverse Waves in a Thin Liquid Gap
It is well known that dielectric breakdown in a liquid generates cavitation bubbles and shock waves. Here we demonstrate that when the liquid is bounded by two solid glass boundaries (10–20-μm separation), rings of microscopic bubbles can be nucleated around the laser-induced cavitation bubble. While generally acoustic nucleation is achieved with longitudinal waves of sufficient tension, this work demonstrates that acoustic cavitation can also be generated from transverse waves. Our experiments identify three waves originating at the boundaries: the fastest is the bulk wave in the solid, followed by a leaky Rayleigh wave at the liquid-solid contact, which is trailed by a Lamb-type wave. For the latter, the two solid boundaries act as a wave guide and generate intense and short-lived cavitation activity within the gap. Streak photography and high-speed photography reveal the microsecond-duration cavitation-bubble dynamics, and subpicosecond strobe photography visualizes the mechanism of bubble nucleation from the accelerated surface. Simulations coupling the solid mechanics with the acoustics support the experimentally observed mechanisms of transverse-wave-induced cavitation inception.
FemtoLux 3 laser for the rapid wide-field second harmonic generation microscopy
FemtoLux 3 laser was used as an illumination source in the wide-field second harmonic generation (SHG) microscope. Relatively high laser pulse energy at a medium pulse repetition frequency allowed for a faster single image acquisition compared to that using laser-scanning. It was also possible to acquire images of relatively large sample areas, which paved the way for the rapid imaging of macroscopic sample areas with microscopic resolution.
Room-temperature lasing from nanophotonic topological cavities
The study of topological phases of light underpins a promising paradigm for engineering disorder-immune compact photonic devices with unusual properties. Combined with an optical gain, topological photonic structures provide a novel platform for micro- and nanoscale lasers, which could benefit from nontrivial band topology and spatially localized gap states. Here, we propose and demonstrate experimentally active nanophotonic topological cavities incorporating III–V semiconductor quantum wells as a gain medium in the structure. We observe room-temperature lasing with a narrow spectrum, high coherence, and threshold behaviour. The emitted beam hosts a singularity encoded by a triade cavity mode that resides in the bandgap of two interfaced valley-Hall periodic photonic lattices with opposite parity breaking. Our findings make a step towards topologically controlled ultrasmall light sources with nontrivial radiation characteristics.
Subwavelength dielectric resonators for nonlinear nanophotonics
Bound states in the continuum (BICs) represent localized modes with energies embedded in the continuous spectrum of radiating waves. BICs were discovered initially as a mathematical curiosity in quantum mechanics, and more recently were employed in photonics. Pure mathematical bound states have infinitely-large quality factors (Q factors) and zero resonant linewidth. In optics, BICs are physically limited by a finite size, material absorption, structural disorder, and surface scattering, and they manifest themselves as the resonant states with large Q factors, also known as supercavity modes or quasi-BICs. Optical BIC resonances have been demonstrated only in extended 2D and 1D systems and have been employed for distinct applications including lasing and sensing. Optical quasi-BIC modes in individual nanoresonators have been discovered recently but they were never observed in experiment. Here, we demonstrate experimentally an isolated subwavelength nanoresonator hosting a quasi-BIC resonance. We fabricate the resonator from AlGaAs material on an engineered substrate, and couple to the quasi-BIC mode using structured light. We employ the resonator as a nonlinear nanoantenna and demonstrate record-high efficiency of second-harmonic generation. Our study brings a novel platform to resonant subwavelength photonics.
Third-order nonlinear optical properties of phycobiliproteins from cyanobacteria and red algae
Second hyperpolarizability (γ) measurements as well as third harmonic generation (THG) imaging was performed to determine if phycobiliproteins contribute to cyanobacteria THG, and to establish if phycobiliproteins are suitable dyes for THG microscopy. Three phycobiliproteins and one phycobilin were investigated via THG ratio γ measurements, revealing phycocyanobilin has ~7× higher γ than β-carotene, a standard THG dye. Phycobiliproteins also had large γ values, showing they are promising THG dyes. Stoichiometric summations of phycobilin γ values revealed they are the dominant source of THG signal from phycobiliproteins. THG imaging was performed to demonstrate phycobiliproteins and phycobilins can be useful THG dyes.