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Tol, J. van, Brunel, L. - C., & Wylde, R. J. (2005). A quasioptical transient electron spin resonance spectrometer operating at 120 and 240 GHz. Rev. Sci. Instrum., 76(7), 074101 (1 to 8).
Abstract: A new multifrequency quasioptical electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometer is described. The superheterodyne design with Schottky diode mixer/detectors enables fast detection with subnanosecond time resolution. Optical access makes it suitable for transient EPR (TR-EPR) at 120 and 240 GHz. These high frequencies allow for an accurate determination of small g-tensor anisotropies as are encountered in excited triplet states of organic molecules like porphyrins and fullerenes. The measured concentration sensitivity for continuous-wave (cw) EPR at 240 GHz and at room temperature without cavity is 1013 spins/cm3 (15 nM) for a 1 mT linewidth and a 1 Hz bandwidth. With a Fabry-Perot cavity and a sample volume of 30 nl, the sensitivity at 240 GHz corresponds to [approximate]3×109 spins for a 1 mT linewidth. The spectrometer's performance is illustrated with applications of transient EPR of excited triplet states of organic molecules, as well as cw EPR of nitroxide reference systems and a thin film of a colossal magnetoresistance material.
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Ryabchun, S. A., Tretyakov, I. V., Finkel, M. I., Maslennikov, S. N., Kaurova, N. S., Seleznev, V. A., et al. (2009). NbN phonon-cooled hot-electron bolometer mixer with additional diffusion cooling. In Proc. 20th Int. Symp. Space Terahertz Technol. (pp. 151–154). Charlottesville, USA.
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Tretyakov, I. V., Ryabchun, S. A., Maslennikov, S. N., Finkel, M. I., Kaurova, N. S., Seleznev, V. A., et al. (2008). NbN HEB mixer: fabrication, noise temperature reduction and characterization. In Proc. Basic problems of superconductivity. Moscow-Zvenigorod.
Abstract: We demonstrate that in the terahertz region superconducting hot-electron mixers offer the lowest noise temperature, opening the possibility of using HTS's in the future to fabricate these devices. Specifically, a noise temperature of 950 K was measured for the receiver operating at 2.5 THz with a NbN HEB mixer, and a gain bandwidth of 6 GHz was measured at 300 GHz near Tc for the same mixer.
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Nagatsuma, T., Hirata, A., Sato, Y., Yamaguchi, R., Takahashi, H., Kosugi, T., et al. (2005). Sub-Terahertz Wireless Communications Technologies. In Proc. 18th International Conference on Applied Electromagnetics and Communications (ICECom 2005) (pp. 1–4).
Abstract: This paper presents a 10-Gb/s wireless link system that uses a 120-GHz-band sub-terahertz electro-magnetic waves. In the transmitter, photonic techniques are used for generation, modulation, and emission of the sub-THz signals, while the receiver is composed of all-electronic devices using InP-HEMTs.
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Nagatsuma, T., Hirata, A., Royter, Y., Shinagawa, M., Furuta, T., Ishibashi, T., et al. (2000). A 120-GHz integrated photonic transmitter. In Proc. International topical meeting on microwave photonics (MWP 2000) (pp. 225–228).
Abstract: A photonics-based 120-GHz transmitter has been developed. A photodiode, a planar antenna and a silicon lens were integrated to form a compact millimeter-wave (MMW) emitter. The MMW signal emitted from the transmitter has been detected with a waveguide-mounted Schottky diode. The received power exceeded 100 μW, which is the highest value ever reported for photonic MMW transmitter at frequencies of >100 GHz
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