LASER: Materials Science Podcast

LASER: Materials Science Podcast


Episode 14 - Filters and Photodetectors

March 26, 2014

Image from Paper


On Episode 14 of LASER we discuss using tree branches as water filters, a new type of super-thin room temperature infrared light detector that uses graphene, and the $1 Origami Microscope.


4:05 The article in Popular Mechanics titled “A simple tree branch can become a backyard water filter”  and the FREE paper in PLOS One “Water Filtration Using Plant Xylem”


5:50  The idea is to help the developing world by testing a cheap water filter that only requires a tree branch and a tube


9:00 its really great when high school students get involved with university research projects and end up publishing papers! If you’re in high school you should talk to a university professor about helping out with a research project a couple of days after class.  Even if you don’t plan to study science! (why would you not plan to study science?!)


12:00 Alex joins the group for the discussion!  Unfortunately he hasn’t read any of the papers…


23:15 from Motherboard.vice.com we are talking about “infrared imaging may be coming to contact lens near you”   and the article “Graphene photodetectors with ultra-broadband and high responsivity at room temperature”


24:30 the article is fine, but I don’t like the headline, and I think that the author of the paper  somewhat misrepresented their results to the press.


25:45 a typical infrared detector is this Superconducting Edge Detector (or Transition Edge Bolometer)   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_edge_sensor


27:00 Alex asks a good question about the superconducting principle behind how a transition edge sensor works.


35:40 Alex thinks his eyes are bizarre


38:42  the story is found in the MIT Technology Review and is “The $1 Origami Microscope”


41:00 there was a TEDx talk about this a few years ago, when it was a $0.50 cent microscope! Since that time, it costs more because they have developed methods for brightfield and darkfield imaging, and that required a few additional parts.


45:40 We talk about roll-to-roll processing and calendaring of green ceramics.  These are manufacturing techniques for many materials.


48:05 Cameron said you can’t re-crystallize Al2O3 from amorphous to crystalline forms, but that is WRONG! http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00774113


Links to purchase the music used in this week’s episode:

Intro:  Open – Crying (Get Olde)

Picture of a Tree That Doesn’t Look Okay – The World Is a Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid to Die

Amoeba – The Adolescents

Outro:  Dreams are Maps – The Wild (Dreams are Maps)