The impact of near-field scanning size on the accuracy of far-field estimation

Author(s):  
Xiao Ren ◽  
Pratik Maheshwari ◽  
Yao-jiang Zhang ◽  
Victor Khilkevich ◽  
Jun Fan ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (8) ◽  
pp. 6471-6484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia Wei Tan ◽  
Bin Bai ◽  
Xiang Yu Xu ◽  
Xiao Lei Yang

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Farzaneh Fadakar Masouleh

<p>Conventional optics suffer from a fundamental resolution limit due to the nature of light. The near-field superlens concept was introduced two decades ago, and its theory for enabling high resolution imaging is well-established now. Initially, this superlens, which has a simple setup, became a hot topic given the proposition of overcoming the diffraction limit. It has been demonstrated that a near-field superlens can reconstruct images using evanescent waves emanating from small objects by means of resonant excitations on the surface of the superlens. A modified version of the superlens named the far-field superlens is theorized to be able to project the near-field subwavelength information to the far-field region. By design, the far-field superlens is a near-field superlens with nanostructures added on top of it. These nanostructures, referred to as diffraction gratings help couple object information available in the evanescent waves to the far-field. Work reported in this thesis is divided to two major sections. The first describes the modelling technique that investigates the performance of a far-field superlens. This section focuses on evaluating the impact of the diffraction gratings geometry and the object size on the far-field superlens performance as well as the resulting far-field pattern. It was shown that a far-field superlens with a nanograting having a duty cycle of 40% to 50% produces the maximum intensity and contrast in the far-field interactions. For periodic rectangular objects, an inverse-trapezoidal nanograting was shown to provide the best contrast and intensity for far-field interactions. The minimal simulation domain to model a symmetric far-field superlens design was determined both in 2D and 3D. This input reduced the required modelling time and resources. Finally, a 3D far-field superlens model was proposed, and the effect of light polarization on the far-field pattern was studied. The second section of this thesis contains the experimental study that explores a new material as a potential candidate for the construction of far-field superlens. The material conventionally used for superlens design is silver, as its plasmonic properties are well-established. However, scaling down silver features to the nanoscale introduces fundamental fabrication challenges. Furthermore, silver oxidizes due to its reactions with sulphur compounds at ambient conditions, which means that operating a silver far-field superlens is only possible in a well-controlled environment. This disagrees with our proposed concept of a low-cost and robust superlens imaging device. On the other hand, highly doped semiconductors are emerging candidates for plasmonic applications due to the possibility of tuning their optical and electrical properties during the fabrication process. While the working principle of a superlens is independent of the plasmonic material of choice, every plasmonic material has a particular range of operating wavelengths. The pros and cons of each plasmonic material are usually identified once used experimentally. In this work, aluminium-doped zinc oxide was the proposed material of choice for the far-field superlens design. The second part of this thesis details the characterization results of the optical, electrical and structural properties of this proposed alternative. Our aluminium-doped zinc oxide samples were highly transparent for large parts of the spectrum. Their carrier concentration was of the order of 10+20 cm-3, and a resistivity of about 10-3 Ω.cm was achieved. The modelled dielectric permittivity for the studied samples showed a cross-over frequency in the near-infrared region, with the highest plasma frequency achieved in this study being 4710 cm-1.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 1335-1343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Gao ◽  
Jun Fan ◽  
Yaojiang Zhang ◽  
Hamed Kajbaf ◽  
David Pommerenke

Open Physics ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Petr Klapetek ◽  
Juraj Bujdák ◽  
Jiří Buršík

AbstractThis article presents results of near-field scanning optical microscope measurement of local luminescence of rhodamine 3B intercalated in montmorillonite samples. We focus on how local topography affects both the excitation and luminescence signals and resulting optical artifacts. The Finite Difference in Time Domain method (FDTD) is used to model the electromagnetic field distribution of the full tip-sample geometry including far-field radiation. Even complex problems like localized luminescence can be simulated computationally using FDTD and these simulations can be used to separate the luminescence signal from topographic artifacts.


2013 ◽  
Vol 295-298 ◽  
pp. 2030-2033
Author(s):  
Zhang Ming Li ◽  
Wen Xiu Zeng

Through in situ tests on the impact vibration of a typical muck ground treatment major project directed by the first author, the vibration propagation law under the impact load for the ultra soft soil ground is obtained, and quantitative environmental safe control distance on the vibration influence is also gained. The main results are the two aspects. (1) The attenuation law of both level and vertical peak vibration acceleration with the horizontal distance can be described well by the negative power function; and the ground vibrations caused by tamping impact can be distinguished between two types, i.e. near-field and far-field. Near-field tamping vibration influence is confined to a small range of the tamping center, which decays obviously faster than the one of far-field. (2) The radius of influence of tamping vibration depends not only on the tamping energy but also the soil type. Loose, slightly dense soft soil has a larger energy absorption capacity and a smaller effect radius of tamping vibration than the dense and hard soil; and the vibration safe control distance is determined as 27.3m in the tests according to the safe boundary determined code of industrial and civil architecture in China.


Author(s):  
J. Hwang ◽  
E. Betzig ◽  
M. Edidin

Results from several different methods for probing the lateral organization of cell surface membranes indicate that these membranes are patchy, divided into domains. The data suggest that on average these domains are 0.1-1 μm across and that they persist for 10’s to 1000’s of seconds. At least some domains in this size range, when labeled by fluorescent proteins or lipids ought to be detectable by conventional, far-field, fluorescence microscopy. However, though some images are consistent with a domain structure for membranes, most far-field images of fluorescent cell surfaces lack the detail necessary to define domains.We have used near-field scanning optical microscopy, NSOM, of fluorescent-labeled cells to visualize membrane patchiness on the nanometer scale. This method yields images with resolutions of 50 nm or less. In our near-field microscope the labeled sample is illuminated by a optical fiber probe, with an aperture of 50-80nm. The probe is scanned over the cell surface at a distance of ˜ 10 nm from the surface. Only surface fluorescence is excited by the scanned probe.


2005 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 1113-1135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susendar Muthukumar ◽  
Reginald DesRoches

This study examines the effect of column hysteretic behavior on the impact response of adjacent frames in multiple-frame bridges. A simplified planar analytical bridge model is developed including inelastic frame action, nonlinear hinge behavior, and abutment effects. Pounding is simulated using a stereomechanical approach. The frame hysteretic models considered include the elasto-plastic and bilinear (traditional), Q-Hyst (stiffness-degrading), and pivot hysteresis (strength-degrading) models. Analytical studies conducted on adjacent bridge frames reveal that the traditional models underestimate the stiff frame displacement amplification due to pounding, and overestimate the flexible frame displacement amplification, when compared with other hysteretic models. A stiffness-degrading model is recommended to accurately estimate the pounding response of bridge frames subjected to far-field ground motion. The use of a strength-degrading model increases the stiff frame displacement amplification by 125% when compared to the stiffness-degrading model for highly out-of-phase frames, and is recommended in the presence of near-field ground motions.


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