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Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/6

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    PublicationOpen Access
    Comparative spectroscopic investigation of Tm3+: tellurite glasses for 2-mu m lasing applications
    (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), 2018) Kurt, Adnan; Speghini, Adolfo; Bettinelli, Marco; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Department of Physics; Çankaya, Hüseyin; Görgülü, Adil Tolga; Sennaroğlu, Alphan; Researcher; Master Student; Faculty Member; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Department of Physics; Koç University Surface Science and Technology Center (KUYTAM) / Koç Üniversitesi Yüzey Teknolojileri Araştırmaları Merkezi (KUYTAM); College of Engineering; College of Sciences; N/A; N/A; 23851
    We performed a comparative spectroscopic analysis on three novel Tm3+: tellurite-based glasses with the following compositions Tm2O3: TeO2-ZnO (TeZnTm), Tm2O3: TeO2-Nb2O5 (TeNbTm), and Tm3+: TeO2-K2O-Nb2O5 (TeNbKTm), primarily for 2-mu m laser applications. Tellurite glasses were prepared at different doping concentrations in order to investigate the effect of Tm3+ ion concentration as well as host composition on the stimulated emission cross sections and the luminescence quantum efficiencies. By performing Judd-Ofelt analysis, we determined the average radiative lifetimes of the H-3(4) level to be 2.55 +/- 0.07 ms, 2.76 +/- 0.03 ms and 2.57 +/- 0.20 ms for the TeZnTm, TeNbTm and TeNbKTm samples, respectively. We clearly observed the effect of the cross-relaxation, which becomes significant at higher Tm2O3 concentrations, leading to the quenching of 1460-nm emission and enhancement of 1860-nm emission. Furthermore, with increasing Tm2O3 concentrations, we observed a decrease in the fluorescence lifetimes as a result of the onset of non-radiative decay. For the H-3(4) level, the highest obtained quantum efficiency was 32% for the samples with the lowest Tm2O3 ion concentration. For the 1860-nm emission band, the average emission cross section was determined to measure around 6.33 +/- 0.34 x 10(-21) cm(2), revealing the potential of thulium-doped tellurite gain media for 2-mu m laser applications in bulk and fiber configurations.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Database for CO2 separation performances of MOFs based on computational materials screening
    (American Chemical Society (ACS), 2018) Eruçar, İlknur; Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; Altıntaş, Çiğdem; Avcı, Gökay; Harman, Hilal Dağlar; Azar, Ayda Nemati Vesali; Velioğlu, Sadiye; Keskin, Seda; Researcher; Post Doctorate Student; Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; College of Engineering; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; 40548
    Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are potential adsorbents for CO2 capture. Because thousands of MOFs exist, computational studies become very useful in identifying the top performing materials for target applications in a time-effective manner. In this study, molecular simulations were performed to screen the MOF database to identify the best materials for CO2 separation from flue gas (CO2/N-2) and landfill gas (CO2/CH4) under realistic operating conditions. We validated the accuracy of our computational approach by comparing the simulation results for the CO2 uptakes, CO2/N-2 and CO2/CH4 selectivities of various types of MOFs with the available experimental data. Binary CO2/N-2 and CO2/CH4 mixture adsorption data were then calculated for the entire MOF database. These data were then used to predict selectivity, working capacity, regenerability, and separation potential of MOFs. The top performing MOF adsorbents that can separate CO2/N-2 and CO2/CH4 with high performance were identified. Molecular simulations for the adsorption of a ternary CO2/N-2/CH4 mixture were performed for these top materials to provide a more realistic performance assessment of MOF adsorbents. The structure-performance analysis showed that MOFs with Delta Q(st)(0) > 30 kJ/mol, 3.8 angstrom < pore-limiting diameter < 5 angstrom, 5 angstrom < largest cavity diameter < 7.5 angstrom, 0.5 < phi < 0.75, surface area < 1000 m(2)/g, and rho > 1 g/cm(3) are the best candidates for selective separation of CO2 from flue gas and landfill gas. This information will be very useful to design novel MOFs exhibiting high CO2 separation potentials. Finally, an online, freely accessible database https://cosmoserc.ku.edu.tr was established, for the first time in the literature, which reports all of the computed adsorbent metrics of 3816 MOFs for CO2/N-2, CO2/CH4, and CO2/N-2/CH4 separations in addition to various structural properties of MOFs.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    In situ formation of copper phosphate on hydroxyapatite for wastewater treatment
    (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), 2022) Rahmani, Fatemeh; Ghadi, Arezoo; Khaksar, Samad; Doustkhah, Esmail; PhD Student; Koç University Tüpraş Energy Center (KUTEM) / Koç Üniversitesi Tüpraş Enerji Merkezi (KÜTEM)
    Here, we control the surface activity of hydroxyapatite (HAp) in wastewater treatment which undergoes peroxodisulfate (PDS) activation. Loading the catalytically active Cu species on HAp forms a copper phosphate in the outer layer of HAp. This modification turns a low active HAp into a high catalytically active catalyst in the dye degradation process. The optimal operational conditions were established to be [Cu-THAp](0) = 1 g/L, [RhB](0) = 20 mg/L, [PDS](0) = 7.5 mmol/L, and pH = 3. The experiments indicate that the simultaneous presence of Cu-THAp and PDS synergistically affect the degradation process. Additionally, chemical and structural characterizations proved the stability and effectiveness of Cu-THAp. Therefore, this work introduces a simple approach to water purification through green and sustainable HAp-based materials.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Grain boundary engineering with nano-scale InSb producing high performance InxCeyCo4Sb12+z skutterudite thermoelectrics
    (Elsevier, 2017) Li, Han; Su, Xianli; Tang, Xinfeng; Zhang, Qingjie; Uher, Ctirad; Snyder, G. Jeffrey; Department of Chemistry; Aydemir, Umut; Faculty Member; Department of Chemistry; College of Sciences; 58403
    Thermoelectric semiconductors based on CoSb3 hold the best promise for recovering industrial or automotive waste heat because of their high efficiency and relatively abundant, lead-free constituent elements. However, higher efficiency is needed before thermoelectrics reach economic viability for widespread use. In this study, n-type InxCeyCo4Sb12+z skutterudites with high thermoelectric performance are produced by combining several phonon scattering mechanisms in a panoscopic synthesis. Using melt spinning followed by spark plasma sintering (MS-SPS), bulk InxCeyCo4Sb12+z alloys are formed with grain boundaries decorated with nano-phase of InSb. The skutterudite matrix has grains on a scale of 100-200 nm and the InSb nano-phase with a typical size of 5-15 nm is evenly dispersed at the grain boundaries of the skutterudite matrix. Coupled with the presence of defects on the Sb sublattice, this multi-scale nanometer structure is exceptionally effective in scattering phonons and, therefore, InxCeyCo4Sb12/InSb nano-composites have very low lattice thermal conductivity and high zT values reaching in excess of 1.5 at 800 K.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Plasmon-coupled photocapacitor neuromodulators
    (American Chemical Society (ACS), 2020) Ülgüt, Burak; Çetin, Arif E.; N/A; N/A; Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; Melikov, Rustamzhon; Srivastava, Shashi Bhushan; Karatüm, Onuralp; Doğru-Yüksel, Itır Bakış; Jalali, Houman Bahmani; Sadeghi, Sadra; Dikbaş, Uğur Meriç; Kavaklı, İbrahim Halil; Nizamoğlu, Sedat; PhD Student; Researcher; PhD Student; PhD Student; Master Student; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; College of Sciences; College of Engineering; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A; 40319; 130295
    Efficient transduction of optical energy to bioelectrical stimuli is an important goal for effective communication with biological systems. For that, plasmonics has a significant potential via boosting the light-matter interactions. However, plasmonics has been primarily used for heat-induced cell stimulation due to membrane capacitance change (i.e., optocapacitance). Instead, here, we demonstrate that plasmonic coupling to photocapacitor biointerfaces improves safe and efficacious neuromodulating displacement charges for an average of 185% in the entire visible spectrum while maintaining the faradic currents below 1%. Hot-electron injection dominantly leads the enhancement of displacement current in the blue spectral window, and the nanoantenna effect is mainly responsible for the improvement in the red spectral region. The plasmonic photocapacitor facilitates wireless modulation of single cells at three orders of magnitude below the maximum retinal intensity levels, corresponding to one of the most sensitive optoelectronic neural interfaces. This study introduces a new way of using plasmonics for safe and effective photostimulation of neurons and paves the way toward ultrasensitive plasmon-assisted neurostimulation devices.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Predicting new iron garnet thin films with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy
    (Elsevier, 2020) N/A; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Zanjani, Saeedeh Mokarian; Onbaşlı, Mehmet Cengiz; Faculty Member; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; College of Engineering; N/A; 258783
    Magnetic iron garnets are insulators with low Gilbert damping with many applications in spintronics. Many emerging spintronic applications require perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) although garnets have only a few PMA types (i.e. terbium and samarium garnet). More and stable PMA garnet options are needed for investigating new spintronic phenomena. In this study, we predict 20 new epitaxial magnetic iron garnet film/substrate pairs with stable PMA at room temperature. The effective anisotropy energies of 10 different garnet films that are lattice-matched to 5 different commercially available garnet substrates (total 50 film/substrate pairs) have been calculated using shape, magnetoelastic and magnetocrystalline anisotropy terms. Strain type, tensile or compressive depending on substrate choice, as well as the sign and the magnitude of the magnetostriction constants of garnets determine if a garnet film may possess PMA. We show the conditions in which Samarium, Gadolinium, Terbium, Holmium, Dysprosium and Thulium garnets may possess PMA on the investigated garnet substrate types. New PMA garnet films with tunable saturation moment and field may improve spin-orbit torque memory and compensated magnonic thin film devices.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Spin-torque oscillation in a magnetic insulator probed by a single-spin sensor
    (American Physical Society (APS), 2020) Zhang, H.; Ku, M. J. H.; Casola, F.; Du, C. H.; van der Sar, T.; Ross, C. A.; Tserkovnyak, Y.; Yacoby, A.; Walsworth, R. L.; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Onbaşlı, Mehmet Cengiz; Faculty Member; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; College of Engineering; 258783
    We locally probe the magnetic fields generated by a spin-torque oscillator (STO) in a microbar of ferrimagnetic insulator yttrium-iron-garnet using the spin of a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond. The combined spectral resolution and sensitivity of the NV sensor allows us to resolve multiple spin-wave modes and characterize their damping. When damping is decreased sufficiently via spin injection, the modes auto-oscillate, as indicated by a strongly reduced linewidth, a diverging magnetic power spectral density, and synchronization of the STO frequency to an external microwave source. These results open the way for quantitative, nanoscale mapping of the microwave signals generated by STOs, as well as harnessing STOs as local probes of mesoscopic spin systems.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    High-yield production of biohybrid microalgae for on-demand cargo delivery
    (Wiley, 2020) Akolpoğlu, Mukrime Birgul; Bozüyük, Uğur; Ceylan, Hakan; Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; Department of Mechanical Engineering; Kızılel, Seda; Doğan, Nihal Olcay; Sitti, Metin; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering; Department of Mechanical Engineering; College of Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; School of Medicine; 28376; N/A; 297104
    Biohybrid microswimmers exploit the swimming and navigation of a motile microorganism to target and deliver cargo molecules in a wide range of biomedical applications. Medical biohybrid microswimmers suffer from low manufacturing yields, which would significantly limit their potential applications. In the present study, a biohybrid design strategy is reported, where a thin and soft uniform coating layer is noncovalently assembled around a motile microorganism.Chlamydomonas reinhardtii(a single-cell green alga) is used in the design as a biological model microorganism along with polymer-nanoparticle matrix as the synthetic component, reaching a manufacturing efficiency of approximate to 90%. Natural biopolymer chitosan is used as a binder to efficiently coat the cell wall of the microalgae with nanoparticles. The soft surface coating does not impair the viability and phototactic ability of the microalgae, and allows further engineering to accommodate biomedical cargo molecules. Furthermore, by conjugating the nanoparticles embedded in the thin coating with chemotherapeutic doxorubicin by a photocleavable linker, on-demand delivery of drugs to tumor cells is reported as a proof-of-concept biomedical demonstration. The high-throughput strategy can pave the way for the next-generation generation microrobotic swarms for future medical active cargo delivery tasks.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Advanced solid-state lasers 2019: focus issue introduction
    (Optical Society of America (OSA), 2020) Goodno, Gregory; Mirov, Sergey; Nilsson, Johan; Petersen, Alan; Sorokina, Irina; Taccheo, Stefano; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Department of Physics; Sennaroğlu, Alphan; Faculty Member; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Department of Physics; Koç University Surface Science and Technology Center (KUYTAM) / Koç Üniversitesi Yüzey Teknolojileri Araştırmaları Merkezi (KUYTAM); College of Engineering; College of Sciences; 23851
    This joint issue of Optics Express and Optical Materials Express features 17 state-of-the art articles written by authors who participated in the international conference Advanced Solid-State Lasers held in Vienna, Austria, from September 29 to October 3, 2019. This introduction provides a summary of these articles that cover numerous areas of solid-state lasers from materials research to sources and from design to experimental demonstration.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Lead halide perovskite quantum dots for photovoltaics and photocatalysis: a review
    (American Chemical Society (ACS), 2022) Department of Chemistry; Peighambardoust, Naeimeh Sadat; Sadeghi, Ebrahim; Aydemir, Umut; Researcher; PhD Student; Faculty Member; Department of Chemistry; Koç University AKKİM Boron-Based Materials _ High-technology Chemicals Research _ Application Center (KABAM) / Koç Üniversitesi AKKİM Bor Tabanlı Malzemeler ve İleri Teknoloji Kimyasallar Uygulama ve Araştırma Merkezi (KABAM); College of Sciences; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; N/A; N/A; 58403
    Lead halide-based perovskite quantum dots (PQDs) have recently emerged as an important class of nanocrystal (NC) materials for optoelectronic and photoelec-trochemical applications. Thanks to their intriguing features including tunable band gap, narrow emission, high charge carrier mobility, remarkable light-absorbing factors, and long charge diffusion length, there has been a surge in research on lead halide-based PQDs and their applications. In this review, we showcase the fundamentals of PQDs and two principal applications including PQD solar cells (PQDSCs) and photocatalytic conversion. First, a thorough discussion on PQDSCs, their structure, surface treat-ment, and interface engineering along with their recent progress are presented. It is highlighted that the improvement of the efficiency of PQDSCs from below 10% to beyond 16% in a matter of a few years has turned them into promising candidates for future SC applications. Subsequently, the application of PQDs in photocatalytic reactions such as hydrogen production, CO2 reduction, and organic compounds' degradation is summarized. Not to mention that, despite the remarkable properties of PQDs in SCs and photocatalysis, the inferior stability of PV devices based thereon under operation as well as their poor tolerance under air, water, light, and heat impede their widespread application. For this, the practical efforts and possible solutions are extensively addressed. Finally, an outlook is provided, addressing further merits, and demerits of each application as well as prospective opportunities.