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High-performance Li-O2 batteries with trilayered Pd/MnOx/Pd nanomembranes

2015, Lu, Xueyi, Deng, Junwen, Si, Wenping, Sun, Xiaolei, Liu, Xianghong, Liu, Bo, Liu, Lifeng, Oswald, Steffen, Baunack, Stefan, Grafe, Hans Joachim, Yan, Chenglin, Schmidt, Oliver G.

Trilayered Pd/MnOx/Pd nanomembranes are fabricated as the cathode catalysts for Li‐O2 batteries. The combination of Pd and MnOx facilitates the transport of electrons, lithium ions, and oxygen‐containing intermediates, thus effectively decomposing the discharge product Li2O2 and significantly lowering the charge overpotential and enhancing the power efficiency. This is promising for future environmentally friendly applications.

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Wearable magnetic field sensors for flexible electronics

2014, Melzer, Michael, Mönch, Jens Ingolf, Makarov, Denys, Zabila, Yevhen, Bermúdez, Gilbert Santiago Cañón, Karnaushenko, Daniil, Baunack, Stefan, Bahr, Falk, Yan, Chenglin, Kaltenbrunner, Martin, Schmidt, Oliver G.

Highly flexible bismuth Hall sensors on polymeric foils are fabricated, and the key optimization steps that are required to boost their sensitivity to the bulk value are identified. The sensor can be bent around the wrist or positioned on the finger to realize an interactive pointing device for wearable electronics. Furthermore, this technology is of great interest for the rapidly developing market of ­eMobility, for optimization of eMotors and magnetic bearings.

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Self‐assembled on‐chip‐integrated giant magneto‐impedance sensorics

2015, Karnaushenko, Daniil, Karnaushenko, Dmitriy D., Makarov, Denys, Baunack, Stefan, Schäfer, Rudolf, Schmidt, Oliver G.

A novel method relying on strain engineering to realize arrays of on‐chip‐integrated giant magneto‐impedance (GMI) sensors equipped with pick‐up coils is put forth. The geometrical transformation of an initially planar layout into a tubular 3D architecture stabilizes favorable azimuthal magnetic domain patterns. This work creates a solid foundation for further development of CMOS compatible GMI sensorics for magnetoencephalography.

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Digital Electrochemistry for On-Chip Heterogeneous Material Integration

2021, Bao, Bin, Rivkin, Boris, Akbar, Farzin, Karnaushenko, Dmitriy D., Bandari, Vineeth Kumar, Teuerle, Laura, Becker, Christian, Baunack, Stefan, Karnaushenko, Daniil, Schmidt, Oliver G.

Many modern electronic applications rely on functional units arranged in an active-matrix integrated on a single chip. The active-matrix allows numerous identical device pixels to be addressed within a single system. However, next-generation electronics requires heterogeneous integration of dissimilar devices, where sensors, actuators, and display pixels sense and interact with the local environment. Heterogeneous material integration allows the reduction of size, increase of functionality, and enhancement of performance; however, it is challenging since front-end fabrication technologies in microelectronics put extremely high demands on materials, fabrication protocols, and processing environments. To overcome the obstacle in heterogeneous material integration, digital electrochemistry is explored here, which site-selectively carries out electrochemical processes to deposit and address electroactive materials within the pixel array. More specifically, an amorphous indium-gallium-zinc oxide (a-IGZO) thin-film-transistor (TFT) active-matrix is used to address pixels within the matrix and locally control electrochemical reactions for material growth and actuation. The digital electrochemistry procedure is studied in-depth by using polypyrrole (PPy) as a model material. Active-matrix-driven multicolored electrochromic patterns and actuator arrays are fabricated to demonstrate the capabilities of this approach for material integration. The approach can be extended to a broad range of materials and structures, opening up a new path for advanced heterogeneous microsystem integration.

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Biomimetic microelectronics for regenerative neuronal cuff implants

2015, Karnaushenko, Daniil, Münzenrieder, Niko, Karnaushenko, Dmitriy D., Koch, Britta, Meyer, Anne K., Baunack, Stefan, Petti, Luisa, Tröster, Gerhard, Makarov, Denys, Schmidt, Oliver G.

Smart biomimetics, a unique class of devices combining the mechanical adaptivity of soft actuators with the imperceptibility of microelectronics, is introduced. Due to their inherent ability to self‐assemble, biomimetic microelectronics can firmly yet gently attach to an inorganic or biological tissue enabling enclosure of, for example, nervous fibers, or guide the growth of neuronal cells during regeneration.

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High-performance magnetic sensorics for printable and flexible electronics

2014, Karnaushenko, Daniil, Makarov, Denys, Stöber, Max, Karnaushenko, Dmitriy D., Baunack, Stefan, Schmidt, Oliver G.

High‐performance giant magnetoresistive (GMR) sensorics are realized, which are printed at predefined locations on flexible circuitry. Remarkably, the printed magnetosensors remain fully operational over the complete consumer temperature range and reveal a giant magnetoresistance up to 37% and a sensitivity of 0.93 T−1 at 130 mT. With these specifications, printed magnetoelectronics can be controlled using flexible active electronics for the realization of smart packaging and energy‐efficient switches.

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Direct transfer of magnetic sensor devices to elastomeric supports for stretchable electronics

2015, Melzer, Michael, Karnaushenko, Daniil, Lin, Gungun, Baunack, Stefan, Makarov, Denys, Schmidt, Oliver G.

A novel fabrication method for stretchable magnetoresistive sensors is introduced, which allows the transfer of a complex microsensor systems prepared on common rigid donor substrates to prestretched elastomeric membranes in a single step. This direct transfer printing method boosts the fabrication potential of stretchable magnetoelectronics in terms of miniaturization and level of complexity, and provides strain‐invariant sensors up to 30% tensile deformation.

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Experimental observation of Berry phases in optical Möbius-strip microcavities

2022, Wang, Jiawei, Valligatla, Sreeramulu, Yin, Yin, Schwarz, Lukas, Medina-Sánchez, Mariana, Baunack, Stefan, Lee, Ching Hua, Thomale, Ronny, Li, Shilong, Fomin, Vladimir M., Ma, Libo, Schmidt, Oliver G.

The Möbius strip, a fascinating loop structure with one-sided topology, provides a rich playground for manipulating the non-trivial topological behaviour of spinning particles, such as electrons, polaritons and photons, in both real and parameter spaces. For photons resonating in a Möbius-strip cavity, the occurrence of an extra phase—known as the Berry phase—with purely topological origin is expected due to its non-trivial evolution in parameter space. However, despite numerous theoretical investigations, characterizing the optical Berry phase in a Möbius-strip cavity has remained elusive. Here we report the experimental observation of the Berry phase generated in optical Möbius-strip microcavities. In contrast to theoretical predictions in optical, electronic and magnetic Möbius-topology systems where only Berry phase π occurs, we demonstrate that a variable Berry phase smaller than π can be acquired by generating elliptical polarization of resonating light. Möbius-strip microcavities as integrable and Berry-phase-programmable optical systems are of great interest in topological physics and emerging classical or quantum photonic applications.