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Holey Silicon-Based Thermopiles For High-Sensitivity Broadband Thermal Detection

A novel thermopile technology using holey silicon enables highly sensitive broadband thermal detection across the entire electromagnetic spectrum.

pH Signaling and Regulation in Pyridinium Redox Flow Batteries

The implementation of cost-effective and reliable energy storage solutions, such as redox flow batteries, is often hindered by the complexity and expense of accurately monitoring their state of charge (SOC) and state of health (SOH). To address this, a novel approach using low-cost management systems and methods has been developed for electrochemical cells based on viologen, particularly pyridinium redox flow batteries. This innovation centers on pH signaling and regulation to enable real-time SOC and SOH monitoring. The viologen species' electrochemical processes naturally induce localized pH changes, and by monitoring and regulating the pH within the cell, researchers can obtain immediate, actionable data on the battery's operating condition. This pH-based system offers a simple, integrated, and economical alternative to conventional, often more complex, monitoring techniques.

A Multimodal Distributed Sensing Device

Researchers at the University of California, Davis have developed tactile feedback systems that enhance spatial and sensory resolution in sensor arrays through unique signal modulation techniques.

Photonic Lantern Spectrometer

Multimode optical fiber was first introduced in astrophotonics applications as “light pipes” to transport light from telescopes to instruments. The integration of multimode optical fiber helped to maximize light collection but offered little control over the propagation modes from the collected light, which affects the quality and speed of light transmission. Single-mode optical fiber used in interferometry proved invaluable for spatial filtering and wavefront correction, providing a stable, reliable, and flexible way to guide light in precision sensing and imaging. Photonic lanterns were conceived in the early 2000s to help bridge a gap between the light-gathering efficiency of multimode optical fiber and the precision of single-mode optical fiber. Photonic lantern devices have reasonably addressed the efficient conversion needs between multimode/ multi-modal and multiple single-mode light paths. However, challenges remain with respect to improving and scaling of photonic lantern devices, including coupling efficiency/losses, bandwidth limitations, and high-order mode (>20) capabilities.

Spatial Temporal Reasoning For Location-Specific Actions

A groundbreaking system that enables navigation in GPS-denied environments by using intelligent systems to mimic biological systems that recognize locations through visual cues and perform contextually appropriate actions.

Integrated Wideband Stepped-Chirp Radar Sensor

This technology represents a significant leap in radar systems, offering millimeter-scale range resolution and high angular resolution.

Oscillating Sensing Circuit

This technology enhances the sensitivity of sensors through exceptional points of degeneracy in various circuit configurations.

Method Of Microbubble Resonator Fabrication

An innovative technique for creating high-sensitivity Whispering Gallery Mode (WGM) sensors through advanced microbubble resonator fabrication.

Indoor Localization Using LTE Signals with Synthetic Aperture Navigation

This technology enhances indoor pedestrian localization accuracy using LTE signals by mitigating multipath errors through synthetic aperture navigation.

LTE-IMU Based Indoor Localization Technology

An innovative approach to indoor localization using LTE signals and IMU data, enhancing accuracy and reliability for navigation.

Vehicular Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) with Lidar and LTE Fusion

An innovative approach to vehicle localization and mapping using lidar and cellular LTE data, enhancing accuracy without relying on GNSS signals.

Monitoring Building Structural Health Using Smartphones And Ambient Vibrations

Traditional methods for monitoring a building's structural health, particularly its natural frequencies and damping ratios, typically rely on expensive, permanently installed sensor systems, which are not widely accessible. This innovation, developed by UC Berkeley researchers, provides a highly scalable and cost-effective method for Monitoring Building Structural Health using Smartphones and Ambient Vibrations. The method leverages smartphones equipped with the MyShake earthquake early warning application to measure the ambient vibrations of a building. By analyzing these vibrations, the application can accurately determine key structural health parameters, namely the building's natural frequencies and damping ratios. This technique transforms readily available personal devices into powerful structural monitoring tools, offering a vastly more accessible and lower-cost solution than existing dedicated sensor networks.

Piezoelectric Polymers

The challenge in utilizing α-Linolenic acid (ALA) for medical adhesives has been its poor water solubility and the high hydrophobicity of poly(ALA), typically necessitating elevated temperatures, organic solvents, or complex preparation methods for tissue application. UC Berkeley researchers have developed ALA-based powder and low-viscosity liquid superglues that overcome this limitation by polymerizing and bonding rapidly upon contact with wet tissue. The versatile adhesives are formulated using a monomeric mixture of ALA, sodium lipoate, and an activated ester of lipoic acid. These adhesives demonstrate high flexibility, cell and tissue compatibility, biodegradability, and potential for sustained drug delivery as a small molecule regenerative drug was successfully incorporated and released without altering the adhesive's properties. Additionally, the inherent ionic nature of the adhesives provides high electric conductivity and sensitivity to deformation, enabling their use as a tissue-adherent strain sensor.

Nonlinear Microwave Impedance Microscopy

      Microwave impedance microscopy (MIM) is an emerging scanning probe technique that enables non-contact, nanoscale measurement of local complex permittivity. By integrating an ultrasensitive, phase-resolved microwave sensor with a near-field probe, MIM has made significant contributions to diverse fundamental and applied fields. These include strongly correlated and topological materials, two-dimensional and biological systems, as well as semiconductor, acoustic, and MEMS devices. Concurrently, notable progress has been made in refining the MIM technique itself and broadening its capabilities. However, existing literature has focused exclusively on linear MIM based on homodyne architectures, where reflected or transmitted microwave is demodulated and detected at the incident frequency. As such, linear MIM lacks the ability to probe local electrical nonlinearity, which is widely present, for example, in dielectrics, semiconductors, and superconductors. Elucidating such nonlinearity with nanoscale spatial resolution would provide critical insights into semiconductor processing and diagnostics as well as fundamental phenomena like local symmetry breaking and phase separation.       To address this shortcoming, UC Berkeley researchers have introduced a novel methodology and apparatus for performing multi-harmonic MIM to locally probe electrical nonlinearities at the nanoscale. The technique achieves unprecedented spatial and spectral resolution in characterizing complex materials. It encompasses both hardware configurations enabling multi-harmonic data acquisition and the theoretical and calibration protocols to transform raw signals into accurate measures of intrinsic nonlinear permittivity and conductivity. The advance extends existing linear MIM into the nonlinear domain, providing a powerful, versatile, and minimally invasive tool for semiconductor diagnostics, materials research, and device development.

Time Varying Electric Circuits Of Enhanced Sensitivity Based On Exceptional Points Of Degeneracy

Sensors are used in a multitude of applications from molecular biology, chemicals detection to wireless communications. Researchers at the University of California Irvine have invented a new type of electronic circuit that utilizes exceptional points of degeneracy to improve the sensitivity of signal detection.

Bent Crystal Spectrometer For Pebble Bed Reactor Burnup Measurement

      Pebble bed reactors (PBRs) are an emerging advanced nuclear reactor design where fuel pebbles constantly circulate through the core, as opposed to housing static fuel assemblies, generating numerous advantages including the ability for online refueling versus expensive shutdowns. Online refueling is overall beneficial but poses an operation challenge in that the pebbles must be measured and analyzed for burnup characteristics very quickly (in under 40 seconds), without much time to cool down, challenging the high Purity Germanium (HPGe) detectors historically used for burnup measurements. HPGe detectors can normally only be operated up to tens of thousands of counts per second, far below radiation rates from freshly discharged fuel, and are therefore operated at large distances from sources, with significant shielding. Only a small fraction of detected counts comes from burnup markers, yielding high uncertainty, or can be completely masked by effects of Compton scattering within the detectors.      To overcome the challenges of using HGPe detectors to measure burnup in continuously fueled reactors, UC Berkeley researchers have developed a novel technology capable of measuring gamma rays within a fine energy ranges and without the interference of Compton scattering. The device is also significantly cheaper than HPGe detectors and offers a reduced detector footprint. Nuclides including but not limited to Np-239, Eu-156, and Zr-95 can be measured and analyzed for burnup, path information through the core, and fast and thermal fluence. Furthermore, precise measurement of the Np-239 content provides better data for reactor safeguard purposes. The technology offers meaningful improvements in measurement accuracy, footprint, and cost, for PBRs and other continuously fueled reactors, such as molten salt reactors (MSRs).

Flexible Hydraulic Actuator Based On Electroosmotic Pump

Traditional hydraulic actuators can be rigid, bulky, and difficult to integrate into flexible or small-scale applications, limiting their use in emerging fields like soft robotics and haptic feedback. This innovation, developed by UC Berkeley researchers, is a Flexible Hydraulic Actuator Based on Electroosmotic Pump. It addresses this limitation with a compact, flexible design that uses an electroosmotic pump (EOP) to achieve controlled shape changes. This unique structure allows the actuator to be configured to change its shape, color, and optical characteristics with low power consumption, offering a distinct advantage in flexibility and miniaturization over conventional actuators.

Inverse Designing Metamaterials With Programmable Nonlinear Functional Responses

Current methods for designing metamaterials to achieve a specific, complex physical response curve are often time-consuming, computationally intensive, and struggle with precisely programming nonlinear functional responses. This innovation, developed by UC Berkeley researchers, addresses this by offering a novel, accelerated inverse design method that leverages a hybrid machine learning approach combining imitation learning and reinforcement learning with Monte Carlo tree search (MCTS). This unique combination allows for the rapid and precise generation of metamaterial structures that meet a plurality of target physical response features, significantly outperforming traditional iterative or purely generative design methods in efficiency and programmability. The resulting metamaterial designs exhibit highly programmable and non-intuitive functional properties.

Ultra-High Range Resolution Doppler Radar Front End With Quadrature-Less Coherent Demodulation

Researchers at the University of California, Davis have developed a Doppler radar front end to overcome detection nulls without quadrature demodulation.

Oxygen Sensor Using Zinc Air Battery Chemistry

There is a need for robust and reliable electrochemical oxygen sensing, particularly in ambient environments. This innovation, developed by UC Berkeley researchers, addresses this opportunity by providing electrochemical sensors and methods for oxygen sensing using zinc-air battery chemistry. The sensor is a compact electrochemical cell that utilizes an anode (comprising a substrate and a current collector), a cathode (comprising a gas permeable substrate and a current collector), and a separator containing an electrolyte positioned between them. An electronic unit electrically couples the anode and cathode and is configured to receive electrical signals indicative of the oxygen level in the ambient environment. This system offers a novel, potentially cost-effective and efficient approach to oxygen measurement compared to conventional sensing technologies.

Thermal Test Vehicle For Electronics Cooling Solutions

As the power density of modern integrated circuits—such as GPUs, CPUs, and NPUs—rapidly escalates, traditional cooling characterization methods have become insufficient for validating next-generation thermal management. UC Berkeley researchers have developed a flexible and scalable Thermal Test Vehicle (TTV) designed to simulate the complex heat profiles of high-performance electronics. Built on an array of individually controllable power transistors and integrated measurement circuitry, this TTV acts as a "thermal twin" for advanced processors. An onboard computer manages real-time feedback and control, allowing the vehicle to emulate specific hotspots and dynamic power loads. This enables engineers to precisely characterize the performance of air, liquid, and immersion cooling solutions under diverse and extreme operating conditions without the risk or cost of using actual silicon.

Improved Optical Atomic Clock In The Telecom Wavelength Range

Optical atomic clocks have taken a giant leap in recent years, with several experiments reaching uncertainties at the 10−18 level. The development of synchronized clock networks and transportable clocks that operate in extreme and distant environments would allow clocks based on different atomic standards or placed in separate locations to be compared. Such networks would enable relativistic geodesy, tests of fundamental physics, dark matter searches, and more. However, the leading neutral-atom optical clocks operate on wavelengths of 698 nm (Sr) and 578 nm (Yb). Light at these wavelengths is strongly attenuated in optical fibers, posing a challenge to long-distance time transfer. Those wavelengths are also inconvenient for constructing the ultrastable lasers that are an essential component of optical clocks. To address this problem, UC Berkeley researchers have developed a new, laser-cooled neutral atom optical atomic clock that operates in the telecommunication wavelength band. The leveraged atomic transitions are narrow and exhibit much smaller black body radiation shifts than those in alkaline earth atoms, as well as small quadratic Zeeman shifts. Furthermore, the transition wavelengths are in the low-loss S, C, and L-bands of fiber-optic telecommunication standards, allowing the clocks to be integrated with robust laser technology and optical amplifiers. Additionally, the researchers have identified magic trapping wavelengths via extensive studies and have proposed approaches to overcome magnetic dipole-dipole interactions. Together, these features support the development of fiber-linked terrestrial clock networks over continental distances.

High-Speed, High-Memory NMR Spectrometer and Hyperpolarizer

         Recent advancements in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy have underscored the need for novel instrumentation, but current commercial instrumentation performs well primarily for pre-existing, mainstream applications. Modalities involving, in particular, integrated electron-nuclear spin control, dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP), and non-traditional NMR pulse sequences would benefit greatly from more flexible and capable hardware and software. Advances in these areas would allow many innovative NMR methodologies to reach the market in the coming years.          To address this opportunity, UC Berkeley researchers have developed a novel high-speed, high-memory NMR spectrometer and hyperpolarizer. The device is compact, rack-mountable and cost-effective compared to existing spectrometers. Furthermore, the spectrometer features robust, high-speed NMR transmit and receive functions, synthesizing and receiving signals at the Larmor frequency and up to 2.7GHz. The spectrometer features on-board, phase-sensitive detection and windowed acquisition that can be carried out over extended periods and across millions of pulses. These and additional features are tailored for integrated electron-nuclear spin control and DNP. The invented spectrometer/hyperpolarizer opens up new avenues for NMR pulse control and DNP, including closed-loop feedback control, electron decoupling, 3D spin tracking, and potential applications in quantum sensing.

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