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Dive into the research topics where Vikas Midha is active.

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Featured researches published by Vikas Midha.


Physical Review B | 2012

Using metallic photonic crystals as visible light sources

Sergei Belousov; M. V. Bogdanova; Alexei Deinega; Sergey Eyderman; Ilya Valuev; Yurii E. Lozovik; Ilya Polischuk; B. V. Potapkin; Kurchatov Square; Badri Narayan Ramamurthi; Tao Deng; Vikas Midha

In this paper we study numerically and experimentally the possibility of using metallic photonic crystals (PCs) of different geometries (log-piles, direct and inverse opals) as visible light sources. It is found that by tuning geometrical parameters of a direct opal PC one can achieve substantial reduction of the emissivity in the infrared along with its increase in the visible. We take into account disorder of the PC elements in their sizes and positions, and get quantitative agreement between the numerical and experimental results. We analyze the influence of known temperature-resistant refractory host materials necessary for fixing the PC elements, and find that PC effects become completely destroyed at high temperatures due to the host absorption. Therefore, creating PC-based visible light sources requires that low-absorbing refractory materials for embedding medium be found.


Journal of Physics D | 2007

Efficient radiation production in a weakly ionized, low-pressure, nonequilibrium gallium-iodide positive column discharge plasma

David Smith; J Darryl Michael; Vikas Midha; George Michael Cotzas; Timothy John Sommerer

Electric-discharge plasmas in gallium-iodide vapours are experimentally found to convert 40% of input electric power into ultraviolet and visible radiation (200–800 nm). The conditions are a weakly ionized positive column consisting of 5–10 Torr argon, and the gallium-iodide vapour is formed by heating condensed gallium-iodide to 100–120 °C. The input power density is 50–100 mW cm−3. The plasma is contained in a sealed silica tube and excited by an external radiofrequency antenna. Computational analysis and plasma diagnostics lead to a quantitative understanding that gallium atoms are formed by electron-impact dissociation of gallium-iodide compounds that evaporate into the plasma volume, and that further electron collisions excite the gallium atoms, which then decay by photon emission. High efficiency is possible only because several photons are emitted per dissociation event, and because nonradiative power channels such as electron-impact elastic heating and vibrational excitation are not dominant. The dissociated species recombine on the wall to reform the species that evaporates. The plasma properties change discontinuously as the molar ratio of iodine to gallium (I/Ga) in the system crosses the values I/Ga = 3 and I/Ga = 2, consistent with the thermodynamic properties of condensed gallium-iodide compounds.


ATOMIC AND MOLECULAR DATA AND THEIR APPLICATIONS: 5th International Conference on Atomic and Molecular Data and Their Applications (ICAMDATA) | 2007

First‐Principles‐Based Development of Kinetic Mechanisms in Chemically Active Light‐Emitting Nonthermal Plasmas and Gases

Valerie Astapenko; Alexander Bagatur’yants; Irina Chernishova; Maxim Deminsky; Alexander Eletskii; Igor A. Kirillov; Andrei Knizhnik; B. V. Potapkin; Elena Rykova; Stanislaw Umanskii; A. Zaitsevskii; Marina Strelkova; Leonid Sukhanov; Andrei Safonov; George Michael Cotzas; Anthony John Dean; J Darryl Michael; Vikas Midha; David Smith; Timothy John Sommerer; Bala Varatharajan; Adrian Tentner

Recent progress in several related research areas such as first‐principles electronic‐structure calculations of atoms and diatomic molecules, theory of elementary processes, kinetics, and numerical engineering, and also continued exponential growth in computational resources enhanced by recent advances in massively parallel computing have opened the possibility of directly designing kinetics mechanisms to describe chemical processes and light emission in such complex media as nonequilibrium plasmas and reacting gases. It is important that plasma and combustion kinetics can be described in the framework of this direct approach to a sufficiently high accuracy, which makes it an independent predictive research tool complementary to experimental techniques. This paper demonstrates the capabilities of the first‐principles based approach to develop kinetic mechanisms. Two examples are discussed in detail: (1) the mechanism of hydrocarbon fuel combustion at high temperatures and (2) light emission in non‐thermal...


Plasma Sources Science and Technology | 2000

Spatio-temporal evolution of a pulsed chlorine discharge

Vikas Midha; Demetre J. Economou


Archive | 2006

Light source incorporating a high temperature ceramic composite and gas phase for selective emission

Timothy John Sommerer; Peter Joel Meschter; Vikas Midha; William Paul Minnear; David Jeffrey Bryan


Archive | 2006

Article incorporating a high temperature ceramic composite for selective emission

Timothy John Sommerer; Peter Joel Meschter; Vikas Midha; William Paul Minnear; David Jeffrey Bryan


Archive | 2006

Light source incorporating a high temperature ceramic composite for selective emission

Timothy John Sommerer; Peter Joel Meschter; Vikas Midha; William Paul Minnear; David Jeffrey Bryan


Archive | 2006

HIGH TEMPERATURE CERAMIC COMPOSITE FOR SELECTIVE EMISSION

Timothy John Sommerer; Peter Joel Meschter; Vikas Midha; Robert Arthur Giddings; David Jeffrey Bryan


Archive | 2003

Composite electrode materials for electric lamps and methods of manufacture thereof

Shankar Madras Venugopal; Alok Mani Srivastava; Holly Ann Comanzo; Vikas Midha; William Winder Beers; Mukunda Srinivas Adyam


Archive | 2007

Thermo-optically functional compositions, systems and methods of making

Sergiy Zalyubovskiy; William Paul Minnear; Vikas Midha

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