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Skin tolerant inactivation of multiresistant pathogens using far-UVC LEDs

2021, Glaab, Johannes, Lobo-Ploch, Neysha, Cho, Hyun Kyong, Filler, Thomas, Gundlach, Heiko, Guttmann, Martin, Hagedorn, Sylvia, Lohan, Silke B., Mehnke, Frank, Schleusener, Johannes, Sicher, Claudia, Sulmoni, Luca, Wernicke, Tim, Wittenbecher, Lucas, Woggon, Ulrike, Zwicker, Paula, Kramer, Axel, Meinke, Martina C., Kneissl, Michael, Weyers, Markus, Winterwerber, Ulrike, Einfeldt, Sven

Multiresistant pathogens such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) cause serious postoperative infections. A skin tolerant far-UVC (< 240 nm) irradiation system for their inactivation is presented here. It uses UVC LEDs in combination with a spectral filter and provides a peak wavelength of 233 nm, with a full width at half maximum of 12 nm, and an irradiance of 44 µW/cm2. MRSA bacteria in different concentrations on blood agar plates were inactivated with irradiation doses in the range of 15–40 mJ/cm2. Porcine skin irradiated with a dose of 40 mJ/cm2 at 233 nm showed only 3.7% CPD and 2.3% 6-4PP DNA damage. Corresponding irradiation at 254 nm caused 11–14 times higher damage. Thus, the skin damage caused by the disinfectant doses is so small that it can be expected to be compensated by the skin's natural repair mechanisms. LED-based far-UVC lamps could therefore soon be used in everyday clinical practice to eradicate multiresistant pathogens directly on humans.

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Hyperspectral terahertz imaging with electro-optic dual combs and a FET-based detector

2020, Martín-Mateos, Pedro, Čibiraitė-Lukenskienė, Dovilė, Barreiro, Roberto, de Dios, Cristina, Lisauskas, Alvydas, Krozer, Viktor, Acedo, Pablo

In this paper, a terahertz hyperspectral imaging architecture based on an electro-optic terahertz dual-comb source is presented and demonstrated. In contrast to single frequency sources, this multi-heterodyne system allows for the characterization of the whole spectral response of the sample in parallel for all the frequency points along the spectral range of the system. This hence provides rapid, highly consistent results and minimizes measurement artifacts. The terahertz illumination signal can be tailored (in spectral coverage and resolution) with high flexibility to meet the requirements of any particular application or experimental scenario while maximizing the signal-to-noise ratio of the measurement. Besides this, the system provides absolute frequency accuracy and a very high coherence that allows for direct signal detection without inter-comb synchronization mechanisms, adaptive acquisition, or post-processing. Using a field-effect transistor-based terahertz resonant 300 GHz detector and the raster-scanning method we demonstrate the two-dimensional hyperspectral imaging of samples of different kinds to illustrate the remarkable capabilities of this innovative architecture. A proof-of-concept demonstration has been performed in which tree leaves and a complex plastic fragment have been analyzed in the 300 GHz range with a frequency resolution of 10 GHz.

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Simulation and analysis of high-brightness tapered ridge-waveguide lasers

2023, Koester, Jan-Philipp, Wenzel, Hans, Wilkens, Martin, Knigge, Andrea

In this work, a simulation-based analysis of a CW-driven tapered ridge-waveguide laser design is presented. Measurements of these devices delivered high lateral brightness values of 4 W · mm - 1mrad - 1 at 2.5W optical output power. First, active laser simulations are performed to reproduce these results. Next, the resulting complex valued intra-cavity refractive index distributions are the basis for a modal and beam propagation analysis, which demonstrates the working principle and limitation of the underlying lateral mode filter effect. Finally, the gained understanding is the foundation for further design improvements leading to lateral brightness values of up to 10 W · mm - 1mrad - 1 predicted by simulations.