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Featured researches published by Jingdi Zhang.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Silk‐Based Conformal, Adhesive, Edible Food Sensors

Hu Tao; Mark A. Brenckle; Miaomiao Yang; Jingdi Zhang; Mengkun Liu; Sean M. Siebert; Richard D. Averitt; Manu Sebastian Mannoor; Michael C. McAlpine; John A. Rogers; David L. Kaplan; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto

An array of passive metamaterial antennas fabricated on all protein-based silk substrates were conformally transferred and adhered to the surface of an apple. This process allows the opportunity for intimate contact of micro- and nanostructures that can probe, and accordingly monitor changes in, their surrounding environment. This provides in situ monitoring of food quality. It is to be noted that this type of sensor consists of all edible and biodegradable components, holding utility and potential relevance for healthcare and food/consumer products and markets.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Dominant Effect of Near-Interface Native Point Defects on ZnO Schottky Barriers

L. J. Brillson; Howard L. Mosbacker; M. J. Hetzer; Yuri M. Strzhemechny; Gregg H. Jessen; David C. Look; G. Cantwell; Jingdi Zhang; J. J. Song

The authors used depth-resolved cathodoluminescence spectroscopy and current-voltage measurements to probe metal-ZnO diodes as a function of native defect concentration, oxygen plasma processing, and metallization. The results show that resident native defects in ZnO single crystals and native defects created by the metallization process dominate metal-ZnO Schottky barrier heights and ideality factors. Results for ZnO(0001¯) faces processed with room temperature remote oxygen plasmas to remove surface adsorbates and reduce subsurface native defects demonstrate the pivotal importance of crystal growth quality and metal-ZnO reactivity in forming near-interface states that control Schottky barrier properties.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Nonlinear terahertz metamaterials via field-enhanced carrier dynamics in GaAs.

Kebin Fan; Harold Y. Hwang; Mengkun Liu; Andrew C. Strikwerda; Aaron Sternbach; Jingdi Zhang; Xiaoguang Zhao; Xin Zhang; Keith A. Nelson; Richard D. Averitt

We demonstrate nonlinear metamaterial split ring resonators (SRRs) on GaAs at terahertz frequencies. For SRRs on doped GaAs films, incident terahertz radiation with peak fields of ~20-160 kV/cm drives intervalley scattering. This reduces the carrier mobility and enhances the SRR LC response due to a conductivity decrease in the doped thin film. Above ~160 kV/cm, electric field enhancement within the SRR gaps leads to efficient impact ionization, increasing the carrier density and the conductivity which, in turn, suppresses the SRR resonance. We demonstrate an increase of up to 10 orders of magnitude in the carrier density in the SRR gaps on semi-insulating GaAs. Furthermore, we show that the effective permittivity can be swept from negative to positive values with an increasing terahertz field strength in the impact ionization regime, enabling new possibilities for nonlinear metamaterials.


IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology | 2013

Optically Tunable Terahertz Metamaterials on Highly Flexible Substrates

Kebin Fan; Xiaoguang Zhao; Jingdi Zhang; Kun Geng; George R. Keiser; Huseyin R. Seren; Grace D. Metcalfe; Michael Wraback; Xin Zhang; Richard D. Averitt

We present optically tunable metamaterials (MMs) on flexible polymer sheets operating at terahertz (THz) frequencies. The flexible MMs, consisting of electric split-ring resonators (eSRRs) on patterned GaAs patches, were fabricated on a thin polyimide layer using a transfer technique. Optical excitation of the GaAs patches modifies the metamaterial response. Our experimental results revealed that, with increasing fluence, a transmission modulation depth of ~ 60% was achieved at the LC resonant frequency of 0.98 THz. In addition, a similar modulation depth was obtained over a broad range from 1.1 to 1.8 THz. Numerical simulations agree with experiment and indicate efficient tuning of the effective permittivity of the MMs. Our flexible tunable device paves the way to create multilayer nonplanar tunable electromagnetic composites for nonlinear and multifunctional applications, including sensing, modulation, and energy harvesting.


Nature Materials | 2016

Cooperative photoinduced metastable phase control in strained manganite films

Jingdi Zhang; X. L. Tan; Mengkun Liu; Samuel W. Teitelbaum; K. W. Post; Feng Jin; Keith A. Nelson; D. N. Basov; Wenbin Wu; Richard D. Averitt

A major challenge in condensed-matter physics is active control of quantum phases. Dynamic control with pulsed electromagnetic fields can overcome energetic barriers, enabling access to transient or metastable states that are not thermally accessible. Here we demonstrate strain-engineered tuning of La2/3Ca1/3MnO3 into an emergent charge-ordered insulating phase with extreme photo-susceptibility, where even a single optical pulse can initiate a transition to a long-lived metastable hidden metallic phase. Comprehensive single-shot pulsed excitation measurements demonstrate that the transition is cooperative and ultrafast, requiring a critical absorbed photon density to activate local charge excitations that mediate magnetic-lattice coupling that, in turn, stabilize the metallic phase. These results reveal that strain engineering can tune emergent functionality towards proximal macroscopic states to enable dynamic ultrafast optical phase switching and control.


Microsystems & Nanoengineering | 2016

Voltage-tunable dual-layer terahertz metamaterials

Xiaoguang Zhao; Kebin Fan; Jingdi Zhang; George R. Keiser; Guangwu Duan; Richard D. Averitt; Xin Zhang

This paper presents the design, fabrication, and characterization of a real-time voltage-tunable terahertz metamaterial based on microelectromechanical systems and broadside-coupled split-ring resonators. In our metamaterial, the magnetic and electric interactions between the coupled resonators are modulated by a comb-drive actuator, which provides continuous lateral shifting between the coupled resonators by up to 20 μm. For these strongly coupled split-ring resonators, both a symmetric mode and an anti-symmetric mode are observed. With increasing lateral shift, the electromagnetic interactions between the split-ring resonators weaken, resulting in frequency shifting of the resonant modes. Over the entire lateral shift range, the symmetric mode blueshifts by ~60 GHz, and the anti-symmetric mode redshifts by ~50 GHz. The amplitude of the transmission at 1.03 THz is modulated by 74%; moreover, a 180° phase shift is achieved at 1.08 THz. Our tunable metamaterial device has myriad potential applications, including terahertz spatial light modulation, phase modulation, and chemical sensing. Furthermore, the scheme that we have implemented can be scaled to operate at other frequencies, thereby enabling a wide range of distinct applications.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Symmetry breaking and geometric confinement in VO2: Results from a three-dimensional infrared nano-imaging

Mengkun Liu; M. Wagner; Jingdi Zhang; Alexander S. McLeod; Salinporn Kittiwatanakul; Zhe Fei; Elsa Abreu; Michael Goldflam; Aaron Sternbach; Siyuan Dai; Kevin G. West; Jiwei Lu; Stuart A. Wolf; Richard D. Averitt; D. N. Basov

Epitaxial strain can play an important role in controlling the local phase dynamics of transition metal oxides. With scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy, we visualize the three dimensional landscape of phase inhomogeneity in strained VO2 films grown on [100]R TiO2 substrates. We demonstrate that three different symmetries are spontaneously broken in the vicinity of the VO2 phase transition: (1) Monoclinic-tetragonal (rutile) crystal symmetry breaking due to the structural phase transition, (2) in-plane (x-y plane) rotational symmetry breaking due to the formation of periodic strain domains, and (3) out-of-plane (z-axis) mirror symmetry breaking at the film cross-section due to substrate-induced epitaxial strain.


Applied Physics Letters | 2017

A three-dimensional all-metal terahertz metamaterial perfect absorber

Meng Wu; Xiaoguang Zhao; Jingdi Zhang; Jacob Schalch; Guangwu Duan; Kevin Cremin; Richard D. Averitt; Xin Zhang

We present a three-dimensional terahertz metamaterial perfect absorber (MPA) that exhibits a high quality factor and is polarization insensitive. The unit cell is composed of two orthogonally oriented copper stand-up split ring resonators deposited on a copper ground plane with capacitive gaps in free space away from the substrate. Near unity (99.6%) absorption at ∼1.65 THz is experimentally obtained in excellent agreement with simulation results. The quality factor is ∼37, which is quite large for a terahertz MPA because of reduced material losses in the all-metal structure. According to simulation results, the MPA is insensitive to the polarization of the incident wave, and more than 90% absorption can be achieved for angles of incidence up to 60° for both TE and TM polarized incident THz waves.


Physical Review B | 2015

Dynamic conductivity scaling in photoexcited V 2 O 3 thin films

Elsa Abreu; Siming Wang; Juan Gabriel Ramirez; Mengkun Liu; Jingdi Zhang; Kun Geng; Ivan K. Schuller; Richard D. Averitt

Optical-pump terahertz-probe spectroscopy is used to investigate ultrafast far-infrared conductivity dynamics during the insulator-to-metal transition (IMT) in vanadium sesquioxide (V2O3). The resultant conductivity increase occurs on a tens of ps timescale, exhibiting a strong dependence on the initial temperature and fluence. We have identified a scaling of the conductivity dynamics upon renormalizing the time axis with a simple power law (alpha = 1/2) that depends solely on the initial, final, and conductivity onset temperatures. Qualitative and quantitative considerations indicate that the dynamics arise from nucleation and growth of the metallic phase which can be described by the Avrami model. We show that the temporal scaling arises from spatial scaling of the growth of the metallic volume fraction, highlighting the self-similar nature of the dynamics. Our results illustrate the important role played by mesoscopic effects in phase transition dynamics.


Light-Science & Applications | 2016

Nonlinear terahertz devices utilizing semiconducting plasmonic metamaterials

Huseyin R. Seren; Jingdi Zhang; George R. Keiser; Scott J. Maddox; Xiaoguang Zhao; Kebin Fan; Seth R. Bank; Xin Zhang; Richard D. Averitt

The development of responsive metamaterials has enabled the realization of compact tunable photonic devices capable of manipulating the amplitude, polarization, wave vector and frequency of light. Integration of semiconductors into the active regions of metallic resonators is a proven approach for creating nonlinear metamaterials through optoelectronic control of the semiconductor carrier density. Metal-free subwavelength resonant semiconductor structures offer an alternative approach to create dynamic metamaterials. We present InAs plasmonic disk arrays as a viable resonant metamaterial at terahertz frequencies. Importantly, InAs plasmonic disks exhibit a strong nonlinear response arising from electric field-induced intervalley scattering, resulting in a reduced carrier mobility thereby damping the plasmonic response. We demonstrate nonlinear perfect absorbers configured as either optical limiters or saturable absorbers, including flexible nonlinear absorbers achieved by transferring the disks to polyimide films. Nonlinear plasmonic metamaterials show potential for use in ultrafast terahertz (THz) optics and for passive protection of sensitive electromagnetic devices.

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Xin Zhang

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Jacob Schalch

University of California

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