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Dive into the research topics where Richard K. Chang is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard K. Chang.


Optics Letters | 1984

Laser emission from individual droplets at wavelengths corresponding to morphology-dependent resonances

H.-M. Tzeng; Kevin F. Wall; Marshall B. Long; Richard K. Chang

Inelastic emission characteristics from individual ethanol droplets (60-microm diameter) containing Rhodamine 6G dye and pumped by a cw laser (514.5 nm) were investigated. Laser emission was confirmed by noting the spectral, temporal, and output-versus-input intensity behavior. The liquid-air boundary of the droplets provides the optical feedback at selected wavelengths corresponding to the morphology-dependent resonances of a spherical droplet.


Optics Letters | 1985

Stimulated Raman scattering from individual water and ethanol droplets at morphology-dependent resonances

Judith B. Snow; Shi-Xiong Qian; Richard K. Chang

Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) from an individual liquid droplet (~30-microm radius) has been observed for H(2)O, D(2)O, and ethanol. The occurrence of a series of spectrally narrow peaks that are regularly spaced in wavelength is consistent with morphology-dependent resonances of the droplet, which acts as an optical resonator. The input intensity required to achieve the SRS threshold for the droplet is considerably less than that for the liquid in an optical cell.


Science | 1986

Lasing Droplets: Highlighting the Liquid-Air Interface by Laser Emission

Shi-Xiong Qian; Judith B. Snow; Huey-Ming Tzeng; Richard K. Chang

When dye-doped ethanol droplets are irradiated with an intense pulsed laser beam, the resulting laser emission from individual droplets highlights the liquid-air interface. Photographs of the lasing droplets in the micrometer size range taken in a single 10-nanosecond laser pulse clearly show the dynamic changes in droplet size, shape, and orientation.


Archive | 1996

Optical processes in microcavities

Richard K. Chang; Anthony J. Campillo

The dielectric microstructures act as ultrahigh Q factors optical cavities, which modify the spontaneous emission rates and alter the spatial distribution of the input and output radiation. The editors have selected leading scientists who have made seminal contributions in different aspects of optical processes in microcavities. Every attempt has been made to unify the underlying physics pertaining to microcavities of various shapes. This book begins with a chapter on the role of microcavity modes with additional chapters on how these microcavity modes affect the spontaneous and stimulated emission rates, enhance nonlinear optical processes, are used in cavity-QED and chemical physics experiments, aid in the single-molecule detection, and influence the design of microdisk semiconductor lasers; and how deformed cavities can be treated with classical chaos theory.


Applied Physics Letters | 2003

Unidirectional lasing from InGaN multiple-quantum-well spiral-shaped micropillars

G. D. Chern; Hakan E. Türeci; A. Douglas Stone; Richard K. Chang; M. Kneissl; Noble M. Johnson

We report unidirectional emission from lasing in In0.09Ga0.91N/In0.01Ga0.99N multiple-quantum-well spiral micropillars. Our imaging technique shows that the maximum emission comes from the notch of the spiral microcavities at an angle about 40° from the normal of the notch. At room temperature, the spiral microcavity lases near 400 nm when optically pumped with 266 or 355 nm light. A reduction in the lasing threshold and an improvement in unidirectionality occurs when the microcavity is selectively pumped near its boundary.


Field Analytical Chemistry and Technology | 1999

Real-time measurement of fluorescence spectra from single airborne biological particles

Steven C. Hill; Ronald G. Pinnick; Stanley Niles; Yong-Le Pan; Stephen Holler; Richard K. Chang; Jerold R. Bottiger; Bean T. Chen; Chun-Sing Orr; Greg Feather

Improved real-time methods for characterizing airborne biological particles are needed. Here we review our efforts in developing techniques for measuring the laser-induced fluorescence (total and spectrally dispersed) of individual airborne particles, and describe our present system, which can measure fluorescence spectra of single micrometer-sized bioaerosol particles with good signal-to-noise ratios. We demonstrate the capability of this system by showing measured spectra of a variety of airborne particles generated in the laboratory from road dust, ammonium sulfate, Bacillus subtilis and other bacteria prepared under various conditions, allergens, cigarette smoke, and chicken-house dust. These spectra illustrate the capability of the system to distinguish between some biological and nonbiological aerosols, and among several types of laboratory-generated biological aerosols. We suggest improvements needed to make our system field portable.


Optics Letters | 2001

Multimode resonances in square-shaped optical microcavities.

Andrew Wing On Poon; F. Courvoisier; Richard K. Chang

Square-shaped two-dimensional optical microcavities (micro-cavities) were investigated for possible applications as filters for dense wavelength-division multiplexing. Multimode cavity resonances were observed in the elastic scattering of approximately 200-microm square-shaped micro-cavities in fused silica. Based on a two-dimensional k-space representation, we accounted for the multimode spectrum by different normal modes with rays confined by total internal reflection. The cavity-mode trajectories need not be closed after each round trip. Single-mode spectra are expected from smaller square-shaped micro-cavities.


Critical Reviews in Solid State and Materials Sciences | 1984

Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering and Nonlinear Optics Applied to Electrochemistry,

Richard K. Chang; B.L. Laube

Abstract The most recently developed diagnostic technique in metal-electrolyte and metal-gas interfaces adapts spontaneous Raman scattering and nonlinear optical generation, techniques normally applied to bulk media, to surface science investigation. For certain metallic surfaces, an enormous increase exists in the Raman (as much as 106 to 108 times) and nonlinear optical signals resulting from submonolayer coverage of molecular adsorbates at the interface. Spontaneous Raman scattering and nonlinear optical scattering are well developed in both theory and practice for the analysis of molecular structure and concentration in bulk media. Instrumentation to generate and detect these inelastically scattered signals is readily available and is adequate for adaption to surface science. However, the mechanism (or mechanisms) giving rise to such a large enhancement at the interfaces is still being actively researched and remains controversial. Theoretical and experimental investigations related to the underlying ...


Applied Optics | 1987

Spatial distribution of the internal and near-field intensities of large cylindrical and spherical scatterers

Daniel S. Benincasa; Peter W. Barber; Jian-Zhi Zhang; Wen-Feng Hsieh; Richard K. Chang

Spatial distributions of the near-field and internal electromagnetic intensities have been calculated and experimentally observed for dielectric cylinders and spheres which are large relative to the incident wavelength. Two prominent features of the calculated results are the high intensity peaks which exist in both the internal and near fields of these objects, even for nonresonant conditions, and the well-defined shadow behind the objects. Such intensity distributions were confirmed by using the fluorescence from iodine vapor to image the near-field intensity distribution and the fluorescence from ethanol droplets impregnated with rhodamine 590 to image the internal-intensity distribution.


Applied Physics Letters | 2004

Current-injection spiral-shaped microcavity disk laser diodes with unidirectional emission

M. Kneissl; Mark Teepe; Naoko Miyashita; N. M. Johnson; Grace D. Chern; Richard K. Chang

A spiral-shaped microcavity heterojunction laser diode fabricated with InGaN multiple quantum wells is demonstrated to operate under current injection conditions and emit unidirectionally. Room-temperature laser operation was achieved for microcavity disk radii ranging from 50 to 350 μm and threshold current densities as low as 4.6 kA/cm2. Unidirectional laser emission is clearly revealed in the far-field pattern with the lateral divergence angle ranging from 60° to 75°. Output power of more than 25 mW was obtained for emission wavelengths near 400 nm.

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Kevin B. Aptowicz

West Chester University of Pennsylvania

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T.T. Chen

National Tsing Hua University

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