Latest Past Events

“SEMICONDUCTOR QUANTUM DOTS, WHY ARE THEY SO QUANTUM? GENESIS, PROSPECTS & CHALLENGES”

McGill University Room: MC603, McConnell Engineering building, 3480 University Street, Montreal

Abstract : Semiconductor nanostructures with low dimensionality like quantum dots are one the best attractive solutions for achieving high performance photonic devices. When one or more spatial dimensions of the nanocrystal approach the de Broglie wavelength, nanoscale size effects create a spatial quantization of carriers along with various other phenomena based on quantum mechanics. Thanks […]

Free

DISTRIBUTED BEAMFORMING AIDED WIRELESS ENERGY TRANSFER

New Jersey Institute of Technology 154 Summit Street, Building: NJIT Campus Center, Room: ATRIUM, Newark

Wireless sensor nodes are characterized by limited energy sources. Although the interest in wireless connectivity is ever-increasing and the need for Internet-of-Things (IoT) applications, such as automated remote access, monitoring, and control are well-appreciated, widespread adoption of networked wireless devices is largely constrained by their affordable deployment and maintenance costs and convenience of their long-term […]

Free

OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY: TECHNOLOGIES AND CHALLENGES

Virtual Event

Distinguished Lecturer: Prof. Huang of National Taiwan University Topic: Optical Coherence Tomography: Technologies and Challenges Nanophotonics modelling for 21St century applications is becoming vital.  The computational modeling provides a fundamental understanding of the relying physics behind the operation of photonic devices. However, computational modeling is still a challenge as some of the existing modeling techniques fail […]

Free