Research Outputs

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    Publication
    10-NJ multipass-cavity femtosecond CR3+: LiCAF laser pumped by low-power single-mode diodes
    (Optical Society of America, 2009) Kärtner, Franz X.; Fujimoto, James G.; Demirbaş, Ümit; Department of Physics; Sennaroğlu, Alphan; Faculty Member; Department of Physics; College of Sciences; 23851
    We report on the generation of 9.9-nJ, 95-fs pulses at a repetition rate of 9.58 MHz from a multipass-cavity Cr3+:LiCAF laser pumped by single-mode diodes with a total absorbed pump power of only 540 mW.
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    5-nj Femtosecond Ti3+:sapphire laser pumped with a single 1 W green diode
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2018) N/A; N/A; Department of Physics; Department of Physics; Muti, Abdullah; Kocabaş, Aşkın; Sennaroğlu, Alphan; PhD Student; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; Department of Physics; Koç University Surface Science and Technology Center (KUYTAM) / Koç Üniversitesi Yüzey Teknolojileri Araştırmaları Merkezi (KUYTAM); Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; College of Sciences; College of Sciences; N/A; 227753; 23851
    We report a Kerr-lens mode-locked, extended-cavity femtosecond Ti3+:sapphire laser directly pumped at 520 nm with a 1 W AlInGaN green diode. To obtain energy scaling, the short x-cavity was extended with a q-preserving multi-pass cavity to reduce the pulse repetition rate to 5.78 MHz. With 880 mW of incident pump power, we obtained as high as 90 mW of continuous-wave output power from the short cavity by using a 3% output coupler. In the Kerr-lens mode-locked regime, the extended cavity produced nearly transform-limited 95 fs pulses at 776 nm. The resulting energy and peak power of the pulses were 5.1 nJ and 53 kW, respectively. To our knowledge, this represents the highest pulse energy directly obtained to date from a mode-locked, single-diode-pumped Ti3+:sapphire laser.
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    80-NJ multipass-cavity chirped-pulse Cr4+: forsterite laser
    (Optical Society of America, 2010) Fujimoto, James G.; Department of Physics; Sennaroğlu, Alphan; Çankaya, Hüseyin; Faculty Member; Researcher; Department of Physics; College of Sciences; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; 23851; N/A
    By using 8.5 W of incident pump power, we obtained 80-nJ, 5.5-ps pulses at 1260 nm with a spectral width of 17 nm from a multipass-cavity, chirped-pulse Cr4+:forsterite laser operated at 4.9-MHz repetition rate. © 2010 Optical Society of America.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    A broken gauge approach to gravitational mass and charge
    (Springer, 2002) Tucker, R. W.; Department of Physics; Dereli, Tekin; Faculty Member; Department of Physics; College of Sciences; 201358
    We argue that a spontaneous breakdown of local Weyl invariance offers a mechanism in which gravitational interactions contribute to the generation of particle masses and their electric charge. The theory is formulated in terms of a spacetime geometry whose natural connection has both dynamic torsion and non-metricity. Its structure illuminates the role of dynamic scales used to determine measurable aspects of particle interactions and it predicts an additional neutral vector boson with electroweak properties. © SISSA/ISAS 2002.
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    A communication theoretical modeling of single-layer graphene photodetectors and efficient multireceiver diversity combining
    (Ieee-Inst Electrical Electronics Engineers Inc, 2012) N/A; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Gülbahar, Burhan; Akan, Özgür Barış; PhD Student; Faculty Member; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; College of Engineering; 234525; 6647
    Graphene with groundbreaking properties has tremendous impact on physical sciences as 2-D atomic layer carbon sheet. Its unique electronic and photonic properties lead to applications such as transistors, graphene photodetectors (GPDs), and electronic circuit components. Metal-graphene-metal (MGM) GPDs with single-or multilayer graphene sheets are promising for future nanoscale optical communication architectures because of wide range absorption from far infrared to visible spectrum, fast carrier velocity, and advanced production techniques due to planar geometry. In this paper, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), bit-error rate (BER), and data rate performances of nanoscale single-layer symmetric MGM photodetectors are analyzed for intensity modulation and direct detection (IM/DD) modulation. Shot and thermal noise limited (NL) performances are analyzed emphasizing graphene layer width dependence and domination of thermal NL characteristics for practical power levels. Tens of Gbit/s data rates are shown to be achievable with very low BERs for single-receiver (SR) GPDs. Furthermore, multireceiver (MR) GPDs and parallel line-scan (PLS) network topology are defined improving the efficiency of symmetric GPDs. SNR performance of SR PLS channels are both improved and homogenized with MR devices having the same total graphene area by optimizing their positions with maxmin solutions and using maximal ratio and equal gain diversity combining techniques.
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    A communication theoretical modeling of single-walled carbon nanotube optical nanoreceivers and broadcast power allocation
    (Ieee-Inst Electrical Electronics Engineers Inc, 2012) N/A; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Gülbahar, Burhan; Akan, Özgür Barış; PhD Student; Faculty Member; Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; College of Engineering; 234525; 6647
    Carbon nanotube (CNT) with its ground-breaking properties is a promising candidate for future nanoscale communication networks. CNTs can be used as on-chip optical antenna for wireless interconnects. Carbon nanotube field-effect transistors (CNTFETs) show significant performance as photodetectors due to wide spectral region and tunable bandgap. In this paper, CNTFETs composed of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) and metal contacts (M-SWNT-M) are used as photodiode receivers in nanoscale optical communication by theoretically modeling diameter-dependent characteristics for shot-, dark-, and thermal-noise-limited cases. Bit error rate (BER), cutoff bit rate, and signal-to-noise ratio performance are analyzed for intensity modulation and direct detection modulation. The multireceiver CNT nanoscale network topology is presented for information broadcast and the minimum SNR is maximized solving NP-hard max-min power allocation problem with semidefinite programming relaxation and branch and bound framework. The significant performance improvement is observed compared with uniform power allocation. Derived model is compared with existing experiments and hundreds of Mb/s data rate is achievable with very low BERs. Furthermore, optimization gain is highest for thermal-noise-limited case while the shot-noise-limited case gives the highest data rate.
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    A comprehensive study on the characteristic spectroscopic features of nitrogen doped graphene
    (Elsevier, 2019) Ogasawara, Hirohito; N/A; N/A; N/A; Department of Chemistry; Solati, Navid; Mobassem, Sonia; Kahraman, Abdullah; Kaya, Sarp; PhD Student; PhD Student; PhD Student; Faculty Member; Department of Chemistry; Koç University Research Center for Translational Medicine (KUTTAM) / Koç Üniversitesi Translasyonel Tıp Araştırma Merkezi (KUTTAM); Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering; College of Sciences; N/A; N/A; N/A; 116541
    Despite significant methodical improvements in the synthesis of N-doped graphene, there are still unsolved questions regarding the control of content and the configuration of nitrogen species in graphene honeycomb network. A cross-examination of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy findings indicates that the nitrogen dopant amount is graphene thicknesses dependent, but the various nitrogen dopant coordination can be obtained on both double- and few-layer graphene. Characteristic defect features (D') appearing in Raman spectra upon N-doping is sensitive to nitrogen dopant coordination, graphitic-pyridinic/nitrilic species and therefore the doping level can be identified. Pyridinic and nitrilic nitrogen as primary species turn graphene to p-type semiconductor after a mild thermal treatment.
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    A computational study of axial dispersion in segmented gas-liquid flow
    (American Institute of Physics (AIP) Publishing, 2007) Gunther, Axel; Stone, Howard A.; Department of Mechanical Engineering; Muradoğlu, Metin; Faculty Member; Department of Mechanical Engineering; College of Engineering; 46561
    Axial dispersion of a tracer in a two-dimensional gas-liquid flow is studied computationally using a finite-volume/front-tracking method. The effects of Peclet number, capillary number, and segment size are examined. At low Peclet numbers, the axial dispersion is mainly controlled by the convection through the liquid films between the bubbles and channel walls. In this regime, the computational results are found to be in a very good agreement with the existing model due to Pedersen and Horvath [Ind. Eng. Chem. Fundam. 20, 181 (1981)]. At high Peclet numbers, the axial dispersion is mainly controlled by the molecular diffusion, with some convective enhancement. In this regime, a new model is proposed and found to agree well with the computational results. These Peclet number regimes are shown to persist for different slug lengths. The axial dispersion is found to depend weakly on the capillary number in the diffusion-controlled regime. Finally, computational simulations are performed for the cases of six bubbles to mimic bubble trains, and results are compared with the theoretical models.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    A computational study of two-phase viscoelastic systems in a capillary tube with a sudden contraction/expansion
    (American Institute of Physics (AIP) Publishing, 2016) Department of Mechanical Engineering; Izbassarov, Daulet; Muradoğlu, Metin; PhD Student; Faculty Member; Department of Mechanical Engineering; College of Engineering; N/A; 46561
    Two-phase viscoelastic systems are computationally studied in a pressure-driven flow with a sudden contraction and expansion using a finite-difference/front-tracking method. The effects of viscoelasticity in drop and bulk fluids are investigated including high Weissenberg and Reynolds number cases up to Wi = 100 and Re = 100. The Finitely Extensible Non-linear Elastic-Chilcott and Rallison (FENE-CR) model is used to account for the fluid viscoelasticity. Extensive computations are performed to examine drop dynamics for a wide range of parameters. It is found that viscoelasticity interacts with drop interface in a non-monotonic and complicated way, and the two-phase viscoelastic systems exhibit very rich dynamics especially in the expansion region. At high Re, the drop undergoes large deformation in the contraction region followed by strong shape oscillations in the downstream of the expansion. For a highly viscous drop, a re-entrant cavity develops in the contraction region at the trailing edge which, in certain cases, grows and eventually causes encapsulation of ambient fluid. The re-entrant cavity formation is initiated at the entrance of the contraction and is highly influenced by the viscoelasticity. Compared to the corresponding straight channel case, the effects of viscoelasticity are reversed in the constricted channel: Viscoelasticity in drop/continuous phase hinders/enhances formation of the re-entrant cavity and entrainment of ambient fluid into main drop. Encapsulation of ambient fluid into main droplet may be another route to produce a compound droplet in microfluidic applications. (C) 2016 AIP Publishing LLC.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    A critical approach to the biocompatibility testing of NiTi orthodontic archwires
    (Vibgyor Online Publishers, 2016) Şahbazoğlu, D.; Toker, S. M.; Saher, D.; Department of Mechanical Engineering; Canadinç, Demircan; Gümüş, Berkay; Uzer, Benay; Yıldırım, Cansu; Polat-Altıntaş, Sevgi; Faculty Member; Department of Mechanical Engineering; College of Engineering; 23433; N/A; N/A; N/A; N/A
    The biocompatibility of Nickel-Titanium (NiTi) archwires was investigated by simulating actual contact state of archwires around brackets, which enabled incorporation of realistic mechanical conditions into ex situ experiments. Specifically, archwires (undeformed, and bound to brackets on acrylic dental molds) were statically immersed in artificial saliva (AS) for 31 days. Following the immersion, the archwires and the immersion solutions were analyzed with the aid of variouselectron-optical techniques, and it was observed that carbon-rich corrosion products formed on both archwire sets upon immersion. The corrosion products preferentially formed at the archwire–bracket contact zones, which is promoted by the high energy of these regions and the micro-cracks brought about by stress assisted corrosion. Moreover, it is suggested that these corrosion products prevented significant Ni or Ti ion release by blocking the micro-cracks, which, otherwise, would have led to enhanced ion release during immersion. The current findings demonstrate the need for incorporating both realistic chemical and mechanical conditions into the ex situ biocompatibility experiments of orthodontic archwires, including the archwire-bracket contact.