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Dive into the research topics where Kumaravelu Ganesan is active.

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Featured researches published by Kumaravelu Ganesan.


Optics Express | 2008

Diamond waveguides fabricated by reactive ion etching

Mark P. Hiscocks; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Brant C. Gibson; Shane Huntington; François Ladouceur; Steven Prawer

We demonstrate for the first time the feasibility of all-diamond integrated optic devices over large areas using a combination of photolithography, reactive ion etching (RIE) and focused ion beam (FIB) techniques. We confirm the viability of this scalable process by demonstrating guidance in a two-moded ridge waveguide in type 1b single crystal diamond. This opens the door to the fabrication of a diamond-based optical chip integrating functional elements such as X-crossings, Y-junctions, evanescent couplers, Bragg reflectors/couplers and various interferometers.


Biomaterials | 2012

Electrical stimulation of retinal ganglion cells with diamond and the development of an all diamond retinal prosthesis

Alex E. Hadjinicolaou; Ronald T. Leung; David J. Garrett; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Kate Fox; David A. X. Nayagam; Mohit N. Shivdasani; Hamish Meffin; Michael R. Ibbotson; Steven Prawer; Brendan J. O'Brien

Electronic retinal implants for the blind are already a market reality. A world wide effort is underway to find the technology that offers the best combination of performance and safety for potential patients. Our approach is to construct an epi-retinally targeted device entirely encapsulated in diamond to maximise longevity and biocompatibility. The stimulating array of our device comprises a monolith of electrically insulating diamond with thousands of hermetic, microscale nitrogen doped ultra-nanocrystalline diamond (N-UNCD) feedthroughs. Here we seek to establish whether the conducting diamond feedthroughs of the array can be used as stimulating electrodes without further modification with a more traditional neural stimulation material. Efficacious stimulation of retinal ganglion cells was established using single N-UNCD microelectrodes in contact with perfused, explanted, rat retina. Evoked rat retinal ganglion cell action potentials were recorded by patch clamp recording from single ganglion cells, adjacent to the N-UNCD stimulating electrode. Separately, excellent electrochemical stability of N-UNCD was established by prolonged pulsing in phosphate buffered saline at increasing charge density up to the measured charge injection limit for the material.


Journal of Neural Engineering | 2012

Ultra-nanocrystalline diamond electrodes: optimization towards neural stimulation applications

David J. Garrett; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Alastair Stacey; Kate Fox; Hamish Meffin; Steven Prawer

Diamond is well known to possess many favourable qualities for implantation into living tissue including biocompatibility, biostability, and for some applications hardness. However, conducting diamond has not, to date, been exploited in neural stimulation electrodes due to very low electrochemical double layer capacitance values that have been previously reported. Here we present electrochemical characterization of ultra-nanocrystalline diamond electrodes grown in the presence of nitrogen (N-UNCD) that exhibit charge injection capacity values as high as 163 µC cm(-2) indicating that N-UNCD is a viable material for microelectrode fabrication. Furthermore, we show that the maximum charge injection of N-UNCD can be increased by tailoring growth conditions and by subsequent electrochemical activation. For applications requiring yet higher charge injection, we show that N-UNCD electrodes can be readily metalized with platinum or iridium, further increasing charge injection capacity. Using such materials an implantable neural stimulation device fabricated from a single piece of bio-permanent material becomes feasible. This has significant advantages in terms of the physical stability and hermeticity of a long-term bionic implant.


Optics Express | 2009

Nano-manipulation of diamond-based single photon sources

Eric Ampem-Lassen; David A. Simpson; Brant C. Gibson; Steven Trpkovski; Faruque M. Hossain; Shane Huntington; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg; Steven Prawer

The ability to manipulate nano-particles at the nano-scale is critical for the development of active quantum systems. This paper presents a technique to manipulate diamond nano-crystals at the nano-scale using a scanning electron microscope, nano-manipulator and custom tapered optical fibre probes. The manipulation of a approximately 300 nm diamond crystal, containing a single nitrogen-vacancy centre, onto the endface of an optical fibre is demonstrated. The emission properties of the single photon source post manipulation are in excellent agreement with those observed on the original substrate.


New Journal of Physics | 2013

Ambient nanoscale sensing with single spins using quantum decoherence

Liam P. McGuinness; Liam T. Hall; Alastair Stacey; David A. Simpson; Charles D. Hill; Jared H. Cole; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Brant C. Gibson; Steven Prawer; Paul Mulvaney; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup; R. E. Scholten; Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

Magnetic resonance detection is one of the most important tools used in life-sciences today. However, as the technique detects the magnetization of large ensembles of spins it is fundamentally limited in spatial resolution to mesoscopic scales. Here we detect the natural fluctuations of nanoscale spin ensembles at ambient temperatures by measuring the decoherence rate of a single quantum spin in response to introduced extrinsic target spins. In our experiments 45?nm nanodiamonds with single nitrogen?vacancy (NV) spins were immersed in solution containing spin 5/2 Mn2+ ions and the NV decoherence rate measured though optically detected magnetic resonance. The presence of both freely moving and accreted Mn spins in solution were detected via significant changes in measured NV decoherence rates. Analysis of the data using a quantum cluster expansion treatment of the NV-target system found the measurements to be consistent with the detection of ?2500 motionally diffusing Mn spins over an effective volume of (16?nm)3 in 4.2?s, representing a reduction in target ensemble size and acquisition time of several orders of magnitude over conventional, magnetic induction approaches to electron spin resonance detection. These measurements provide the basis for the detection of nanovolume spins in solution, such as in the internal compartments of living cells, and are directly applicable to scanning probe architectures.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Diamond-based structures to collect and guide light

Stefania Castelletto; J. P. Harrison; L. Marseglia; Antony C Stanley-Clarke; Brant C. Gibson; Barbara A. Fairchild; J. P. Hadden; Y.-L. D. Ho; Mark P. Hiscocks; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Shane Huntington; François Ladouceur; Andrew D. Greentree; Steven Prawer; Jeremy L. O'Brien; John Rarity

We examine some promising photonic structures for collecting and guiding light in bulk diamond. The aim of this work is to optimize single photon sources and single spin read-out from diamond color centers, specifically NV centers. We review the modeling and fabrication (by focused ion beam and reactive ion etching) of solid immersion lenses, waveguides and photonic crystal cavities in monolithic diamond.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Magneto-optical imaging of thin magnetic films using spins in diamond

David A. Simpson; Jean-Philippe Tetienne; Julia M. McCoey; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Liam T. Hall; Steven Petrou; R. E. Scholten; Lloyd C. L. Hollenberg

Imaging the fields of magnetic materials provides crucial insight into the physical and chemical processes surrounding magnetism, and has been a key ingredient in the spectacular development of magnetic data storage. Existing approaches using the magneto-optic Kerr effect, x-ray and electron microscopy have limitations that constrain further development, and there is increasing demand for imaging and characterisation of magnetic phenomena in real time with high spatial resolution. Here we show how the magneto-optical response of an array of negatively-charged nitrogen-vacancy spins in diamond can be used to image and map the sub-micron stray magnetic field patterns from thin ferromagnetic films. Using optically detected magnetic resonance, we demonstrate wide-field magnetic imaging over 100 × 100 μm2 with sub-micron spatial resolution at video frame rates, under ambient conditions. We demonstrate an all-optical spin relaxation contrast imaging approach which can image magnetic structures in the absence of an applied microwave field. Straightforward extensions promise imaging with sub-μT sensitivity and sub-optical spatial and millisecond temporal resolution. This work establishes practical diamond-based wide-field microscopy for rapid high-sensitivity characterisation and imaging of magnetic samples, with the capability for investigating magnetic phenomena such as domain wall and skyrmion dynamics and the spin Hall effect in metals.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Filling schemes at submicron scale: development of submicron sized plasmonic colour filters.

Ranjith Rajasekharan; Eugeniu Balaur; Aliaksandr Minovich; Sean M. Collins; Timothy D. James; Amir Djalalian-Assl; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Snjezana Tomljenovic-Hanic; Sasikaran Kandasamy; Efstratios Skafidas; Dragomir N. Neshev; Paul Mulvaney; Ann Roberts; Steven Prawer

The pixel size imposes a fundamental limit on the amount of information that can be displayed or recorded on a sensor. Thus, there is strong motivation to reduce the pixel size down to the nanometre scale. Nanometre colour pixels cannot be fabricated by simply downscaling current pixels due to colour cross talk and diffraction caused by dyes or pigments used as colour filters. Colour filters based on plasmonic effects can overcome these difficulties. Although different plasmonic colour filters have been demonstrated at the micron scale, there have been no attempts so far to reduce the filter size to the submicron scale. Here, we present for the first time a submicron plasmonic colour filter design together with a new challenge - pixel boundary errors at the submicron scale. We present simple but powerful filling schemes to produce submicron colour filters, which are free from pixel boundary errors and colour cross- talk, are polarization independent and angle insensitive, and based on LCD compatible aluminium technology. These results lay the basis for the development of submicron pixels in displays, RGB-spatial light modulators, liquid crystal over silicon, Google glasses and pico-projectors.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2016

In vivo biocompatibility of boron doped and nitrogen included conductive‐diamond for use in medical implants

David J. Garrett; Alexia L. Saunders; Ceara McGowan; Joscha Specks; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Hamish Meffin; David A. X. Nayagam

Recently, there has been interest in investigating diamond as a material for use in biomedical implants. Diamond can be rendered electrically conducting by doping with boron or nitrogen. This has led to inclusion of boron doped and nitrogen included diamond elements as electrodes and/or feedthroughs for medical implants. As these conductive device elements are not encapsulated, there is a need to establish their clinical safety for use in implants. This article compares the biocompatibility of electrically conducting boron doped diamond (BDD) and nitrogen included diamond films and electrically insulating poly crystalline diamond films against a silicone negative control and a BDD sample treated with stannous octoate as a positive control. Samples were surgically implanted into the back muscle of a guinea pig for a period of 4-15 weeks, excised and the implant site sectioned and submitted for histological analysis. All forms of diamond exhibited a similar or lower thickness of fibrotic tissue encapsulating compared to the silicone negative control samples. All forms of diamond exhibited similar or lower levels of acute, chronic inflammatory, and foreign body responses compared to the silicone negative control indicating that the materials are well tolerated in vivo.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Near-surface spectrally stable nitrogen vacancy centres engineered in single crystal diamond.

Alastair Stacey; David A. Simpson; Timothy J. Karle; Brant C. Gibson; Victor M. Acosta; Zhihong Huang; Kai Mei C Fu; Charles Santori; Raymond G. Beausoleil; Liam P. McGuinness; Kumaravelu Ganesan; Snjezana Tomljenovic-Hanic; Andrew D. Greentree; Steven Prawer

A method for engineering thin (<100 nm) layers of homoepitaxial diamond containing high quality, spectrally stable, isolated nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres is reported. The photoluminescence excitation linewidth of the engineered NVs are as low as 140 MHz, at temperatures below 12 K, while the spin properties are at a level suitable for quantum memory and spin register applications. This methodology of NV fabrication is an important step toward scalable and practical diamond based photonic devices suitable for quantum information processing.

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Arman Ahnood

University of Melbourne

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