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Din Ping Tsai

Researcher at Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Publications -  572
Citations -  22884

Din Ping Tsai is an academic researcher from Hong Kong Polytechnic University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metamaterial & Plasmon. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 532 publications receiving 18101 citations. Previous affiliations of Din Ping Tsai include University of Toronto & Industrial Technology Research Institute.

Papers
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Molecular decay rates and emission frequencies in the vicinity of an anisotropic metamaterial

TL;DR: In this paper, the decay rates and emission frequencies of a fluorescing molecule in the vicinity of an anisotropic metamaterial are studied within a phenomenological model, and a special kind of indefinite medium recently shown to have a broadband all-angle negative refraction is studied for its interaction with the emitting dipole in the long wavelength limit at close molecule-substrate distances.
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Design and fabrication of optical thin films for remote sensing instruments

TL;DR: In this article, optical thin films designed for multispectral band-pass filters and a primary Ag mirror were deposited on radiation-resistant glass by ion-beam-assisted deposition.
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Metasurface‐Based Abrupt Autofocusing Beam for Biomedical Applications

TL;DR: In this paper , an abrupt autofocusing (AAF) beam by a nanophotonic metasurface for biomedical applications is demonstrated, using the AAF beam to deliver optical energy selectively to specific locations.
Patent

Handheld facial skin analyzing device

TL;DR: A handheld facial analyzing device based on estimating the characteristics of human facial skin includes an image capturing unit, a memory unit, display unit, processing unit, and a user interface as mentioned in this paper.
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Meta-lens light-sheet fluorescence microscopy for in vivo imaging

TL;DR: With the integration of nanophotonic meta-lens, the complexity of the LSFM system is significantly reduced, and it is capable of performing multicolor fluorescent imaging of live C. elegans with cellular resolution.