Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12573/395
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Article Citation - WoS: 63Citation - Scopus: 64Effective Neural Photostimulation Using Indium-Based Type-II Quantum Dots(Amer Chemical Soc, 2018-07-18) Jalali, Houman Bahmani; Aria, Mohammad Mohammadi; Dikbas, Ugur Meric; Sadeghi, Sadra; Kumar, Baskaran Ganesh; Sahin, Mehmet; Nizamoglu, Sedat; Ganesh Kumar, Baskaran; Bahmani Jalali, Houman; Mohammadi Aria, MohammadLight-induced stimulation of neurons via photoactive surfaces offers rich opportunities for the development of therapeutic methods and high-resolution retinal prosthetic devices. Quantum dots serve as an attractive building block for such surfaces, as they can be easily functionalized to match the biocompatibility and charge transport requirements of cell stimulation. Although indium based colloidal quantum dots with type-I band alignment have attracted significant attention as a nontoxic alternative to cadmium-based ones, little attention has been paid to their photovoltaic potential as type-II heterostructures. Herein, we demonstrate type-II indium phosphide/zinc oxide core/shell quantum dots that are incorporated into a photoelectrode structure for neural photostimulation. This induces a hyperpolarizing bioelectrical current that triggers the firing of a single neural cell at 4 mu W mm(-2), 26-fold lower than the ocular safety limit for continuous exposure to visible light. These findings show that nanomaterials can induce a biocompatible and effective biological junction and can introduce a route in the use of quantum dots in photoelectrode architectures for artificial retinal prostheses.Article Citation - WoS: 16Citation - Scopus: 18Structurally Colored Physically Unclonable Functions With Ultra-Rich and Stable Encoding Capacity(Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH, 2025) Esidir, Abidin; Ren, Miaoning; Pekdemir, Sami; Kalay, Mustafa; Kayaci, Nilgun; Gunaltay, Nail; Onses, Mustafa SerdarIdentity security and counterfeiting assume a critical importance in the digitized world. An effective approach to addressing these issues is the use of physically unclonable functions (PUFs). The overarching challenge is a simultaneous combination of extremely high encoding capacity, stable operation, practical fabrication, and a widely available readout mechanism. Herein this challenge is addressed by designing an optical PUF via exploiting the thickness-dependent structural color formation in nanoscopic films of ZnO. The structural coloration ensures authentication using widely available bright-field-based optical readout, whereas the metal oxide provides a high degree of structural stability. True physical randomness in spatial position is achieved by physical vapor deposition of ZnO through stencil masks that are fabricated by pore formation in polycarbonate membranes via photothermal processing of stochastically positioned plasmonic nanoparticles. Structural coloration emerges from thin film interference as confirmed via simulation studies. The rich color variation and stochastic definition of domain size and geometry result in chaotic features with an encoding capacity that approaches (6.4 x 105)(2752x2208). Deep learning-based authentication is further demonstrated by transforming these chaotic features into unbreakable codes without field limitations. This ultra-rich encoding capacity, coupled with outstanding thermal and chemical stability, forms a new cutting edge for state-of-the-art PUF-based encoding systems.
