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Dive into the research topics where Yasin Karadag is active.

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Featured researches published by Yasin Karadag.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Spectral tuning of liquid microdroplets standing on a superhydrophobic surface using electrowetting

Alper Kiraz; Yasin Karadag; Ahmet F. Coskun

Using electrowetting, we demonstrate reversible spectral tuning of the whispering gallery modes of glycerol/water microdroplets standing on a superhydrophobic surface by up to 4.7nm at 400V. Our results can inspire electrically tunable optical switches and filters based on microdroplets on a superhydrophobic surface. The sensitivity of the observed spectral drift to the contact angle can also be used to measure the contact angles of microdroplets on a superhydrophobic surface.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Large spectral tuning of liquid microdroplets standing on a superhydrophobic surface using optical scattering force

Alper Kiraz; S. Ç. Yavuz; Yasin Karadag; Adnan Kurt; Alphan Sennaroglu; Huseyin Cankaya

We demonstrate large spectral tuning of glycerol/water microdroplets standing on a superhydrophobic surface using the optical scattering force exerted by a 1064nm Nd3+:YVO4 solid-state laser. Spectral tuning up to 30nm is presented in the whispering gallery modes as a result of the deformation of the microdroplets toward a truncated prolate spheroid geometry. Observed large spectral tuning is also reported to be highly reversible. This demonstration can inspire novel, largely tunable optical switches or filters based on liquid microdroplets kept in a sealed chamber.


Optics Letters | 2013

Dye lasing in optically manipulated liquid aerosols

Yasin Karadag; Mehdi Aas; Alexandr Jonáš; Suman Anand; David McGloin; Alper Kiraz

We report lasing in airborne, rhodamine B-doped glycerol-water droplets with diameters ranging between 7.7 and 11.0 μm, which were localized using optical tweezers. While being trapped near the focal point of an infrared laser, the droplets were pumped with a Q-switched green laser. Our experiments revealed nonlinear dependence of the intensity of the droplet whispering gallery modes (WGMs) on the pump laser fluence, indicating dye lasing. The average wavelength of the lasing WGMs could be tuned between 600 and 630 nm by changing the droplet size. These results may lead to new ways of probing airborne particles, exploiting the high sensitivity of stimulated emission to small perturbations in the droplet laser cavity and the gain medium.


Langmuir | 2011

Probing Microscopic Wetting Properties of Superhydrophobic Surfaces by Vibrated Micrometer-Sized Droplets

Alexandr Jonáš; Yasin Karadag; Nevin Tasaltin; Ibrahim Kucukkara; Alper Kiraz

We determine contact angles of micrometer-sized NaCl-water droplets on superhydrophobic surfaces by analyzing their lowest-order axisymmetric vibrational resonances driven by vertical oscillations of the surface. Fluorescence spectra of the dye-doped droplets excited by laser light feature whispering-gallery modes (WGMs) whose spectral widths depend on the droplet vibration amplitude, thus enabling precise measurements of the droplet mechanical resonant frequency. Following droplet size determination by WGM mode-matching, we calculate the contact angles from the dependence of the measured mechanical resonant frequency on the droplet size for two surfaces with different superhydrophobicity levels, and find a good correlation with the values measured by direct imaging of millimeter-sized droplets.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Determination of microdroplet contact angles using electrically driven droplet oscillations

Yasin Karadag; Alexandr Jonáš; Nevin Tasaltin; Alper Kiraz

Contact angles of micrometer-sized NaCl-water droplets are determined by whispering gallery mode spectroscopy, using the dependence of the lowest-order mechanical resonant frequency of the electrically driven droplet oscillations on the droplet size


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2016

Observation of whispering gallery modes in elastic light scattering from microdroplets optically trapped in a microfluidic channel

S. Anand; Mustafa Eryürek; Yasin Karadag; Ahmet Erten; Ali Serpengüzel; Alexandr Jonáš; Alper Kiraz

Optical whispering gallery modes (WGMs) were observed in elastic scattering spectra recorded from oil-in-water emulsion droplets in a microfluidic channel. Droplets with diameters ranging between 15 and 50 μm were trapped by optical tweezers near the tip of a single mode fiber that enabled the excitation of the WGMs using a tunable laser. Quality factors of the WGMs were observed to increase with droplet size. WGMs with quality factors of more than 104 were observed for droplets with diameters around 45 μm. In some cases, recorded WGMs drifted monotonically to the blue end of the spectrum due to droplet dissolution in the host liquid. Fluctuating spectral shifts to both blue and red ends of the spectrum were also observed. These were attributed to the presence of randomly diffusing particulate contaminants in the droplet liquid, indicating the potential of optically trapped droplet resonators for optical sensing applications.


International Journal of Optomechatronics | 2009

Photothermal Tuning and Size Locking of Salt-Water Microdroplets on a Superhydrophobic Surface

Michael Mestre; Yasin Karadag; S. Cigdem Yorulmaz; Mustafa Gündoğan; Alper Kiraz

Liquid microdroplets are attractive as optical microcavities with tunable resonances for applications in quantum optics and biological sensing, owing to their flexible nature and spherical shape. Salt-water microdroplets can be used in such experiments while standing on a superhydrophobic surface that preserves their spherical geometry. Here, we report how the photothermal effect enables continuous tuning or locking of the whispering gallery mode (WGM) spectrum and size of salt-water microdroplets on a superhydrophobic surface. Local heating by an infrared laser focused at the center of a microdroplet causes it to depart from its equilibrium size, shifting the WGM spectrum. This photothermal tuning effect is fully reversible and can be used to tune the microdroplet radius with a precision reaching 1 Å. We combine this effect with fluorescence excitation spectroscopy using a fixed wavelength laser to measure Q-factors of up to ∼105. Conversely, focusing the heating laser to the microdroplet rim reveals absorption resonances, leading to a hysteretic behavior when cycling the laser power. We show that this behavior can be used to lock the size of a microdroplet and make it exhibit optical bistability. WGM resonances of locked microdroplets are probed using a tunable laser, showing a spectral locking precision reaching <0.01 nm over tens of minutes. These results indicate that the wavelength stability and positioning challenges inherent to liquid microdroplets in air can be overcome, providing an easily tunable and lockable alternative to solid optical microcavities and making them potential candidates for studies in cavity optomechanics.


Optics Letters | 2013

Size stabilization of surface-supported liquid aerosols using tapered optical fiber coupling

Yasin Karadag; Alexandr Jonáš; Ibrahim Kucukkara; Alper Kiraz

We demonstrate long-term size stabilization of surface-supported liquid aerosols of salt-water. Single tapered optical fibers were used to couple the light from independent heating and probe lasers into individual microdroplets that were kept on a superhydrophobic surface in a high-humidity chamber. Size stabilization of microdroplets resulted from competition between resonant absorption of the infrared heating laser by a microdroplet whispering gallery mode and water condensation in the sample chamber. Microdroplet size was continuously monitored using the tunable red probe laser. Thanks to the narrow linewidth of the heating laser, stabilization of the 110 μm radius of a microdroplet with a precision down to 0.54 nm was achieved for a period of 410 s.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Droplet resonator based optofluidic microlasers

Alper Kiraz; Alexandr Jonáš; Mehdi Aas; Yasin Karadag; Oto Brzobohatý; Jan Ježek; Zdeněk Pilát; Pavel Zemánek; Suman Anand; David McGloin

We introduce tunable optofluidic microlasers based on active optical resonant cavities formed by optically stretched, dye-doped emulsion droplets confined in a dual-beam optical trap. To achieve tunable dye lasing, optically pumped droplets of oil dispersed in water are stretched by light in the dual-beam trap. Subsequently, resonant path lengths of whispering gallery modes (WGMs) propagating in the droplet are modified, leading to shifts in the microlaser emission wavelengths. We also report lasing in airborne, Rhodamine B-doped glycerolwater droplets which were localized using optical tweezers. While being trapped near the focal point of an infrared laser, the droplets were pumped with a Q-switched green laser. Furthermore, biological lasing in droplets supported by a superhydrophobic surface is demonstrated using a solution of Venus variant of the yellow fluorescent protein or E. Coli bacterial cells expressing stably the Venus protein. Our results may lead to new ways of probing airborne particles, exploiting the high sensitivity of stimulated emission to small perturbations in the droplet laser cavity and the gain medium.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2008

Large spectral tuning of liquid microdroplets by local heating with a focused infrared laser

Alper Kiraz; Yasin Karadag; S. C. Yorulmaz; Metin Muradoglu

Large deformations can easily be introduced in liquid microdroplets by applying relatively small external forces or controlling the evaporation/condensation kinetics. This makes liquid microdroplets attractive to serve as the building blocks of largely tunable optical switches or filters that are essential in optical communication systems based on wavelength division multiplexing. Solid optical microcavities have not found large use in these applications, mainly due to their rigid nature. The fact that liquid microdroplets are low-cost and disposable can also prove to be important in mass production of these photonic devices. Here, we show that local heating with an infrared laser can be used to largely tune the whispering gallery modes (WGMs) of water/glycerol or salty water microdroplets standing on a superhydrophobic surface. In the scheme presented, a liquid microdroplet kept in a humidity chamber is stabilized on a superhydrophobic surface, and an infrared laser beam is focused near the center of the microdroplet. As a result of the local heating, the temperature of the liquid microdroplet increases, and the water content in the liquid microdroplet evaporates until a new equilibrium is reached. At the new equilibrium state, the non-volatile component (i.e. glycerol or salt) attains a higher concentration in the liquid microdroplet. We report tunability over large spectral ranges up to 30 nm at around 590 nm. For salty water microdroplets the reported spectral tuning mechanism is almost fully reversible, while for the case of glycerol/water microdroplets the spectral tuning mechanism can be made highly reversible when the chamber is saturated with glycerol vapor and the relative water humidity approaches unity.

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Alexandr Jonáš

Istanbul Technical University

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