Detectors

Detectors

Light improves wind turbine power generation

Researchers at the Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy at the Technical University of Denmark, have demonstrated for the first time the use of a wind turbine equipped with a laser for improved performance.

Metal lenses allow photodetectors to see better

Researchers in the US have come up with a way of improving the sensitivity of metal-semiconductor-metal (MSM) photodetectors without compromising their performance in terms of speed. They accomplished this by modifying the area around the detector to produce a plasmonic lens, which enables it to detect more of the incoming light1,2.

Hyperspectral imaging selects the best fruit

Wasted food amounts to loss of earnings if you're a retailer selling produce. Damaged or rotting fruits and vegetables are routinely thrown out when they can no longer be sold. It is therefore imperative that the retailer buys produce with a good shelf life. But knowing which ones will stay fresh the longest is not always apparent from a visual inspection. Bruised fruit may show no signs of damage on the surface but will be the first to rot.

Fibre sensor operates at extreme temperatures

ResearchBlogging.orgOptical fibres can be used in a variety of ways to perform remote sensing operations. Take the case of the Fibre Fabry-Pérot (FFP) interferometer, for example. Working on the principle of light interference produced by two parallel reflecting surfaces either side of a small cavity, they can be constructed in different ways, either with an external cavity, or with the cavity located within the body of the fibre itself. They can be used to measure pressure, temperature or strain, all by detecting changes in the optical path length of the cavity due to environmental influences. They can even be used as chemical sensors because the optical path length in the cavity is related to the refractive index of the medium inside. Researchers at the Missouri University of Science and Technology have come up with a way in which to do just that, in such a way that produces a highly robust device suitable for chemical sensing1.

Photo-acoustics to detect explosives

ResearchBlogging.orgAfter having just reported on a new and novel use of the photo-acoustic effect for use in the printing industry (Photo-acoustics measure ink thickness), here's another story that's (cliché alert!) hot of the press: Researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the University of Tennessee have used