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Nezih Pala

Researcher at Florida International University

Publications -  222
Citations -  4662

Nezih Pala is an academic researcher from Florida International University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmon & Terahertz radiation. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 205 publications receiving 3801 citations. Previous affiliations of Nezih Pala include International University, Cambodia & Columbia University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sonochemistry: Science and Engineering

TL;DR: The individual and mutual effect of important input parameters on the nanomaterial synthesis process as a start to help understand the underlying mechanism is discussed and an objective discussion of the diversely synthesizednanomaterial follows to divulge the easiness imparted by sonochemistry.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

IoT-based occupancy monitoring techniques for energy-efficient smart buildings

TL;DR: The goal is to lay down a framework for future research to exploit the spatio-temporal data obtained from one or more of various IoT devices such as temperature sensors, surveillance cameras, and RFID tags that may be already in use in the buildings.
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LIGHTNETs: Smart LIGHTing and Mobile Optical Wireless NETworks — A Survey

TL;DR: A tutorial and survey of advances in Free-space-optical and smart lighting technologies and the potential for integration of the two as a single field of study: LIGHTNETs are presented.
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Prospects and Challenges of Volatile Organic Compound Sensors in Human Healthcare.

TL;DR: To overcome selectivity barriers, sensor arrays enabling multimodal sensing, have been used with pattern recognition techniques, and the use of various forms of nanomaterial not only enhances sensing performance, but also plays a major role in detection on a miniaturized scale.
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Rapid Detection of Infectious Envelope Proteins by Magnetoplasmonic Toroidal Metasensors

TL;DR: This work reports on the observation of magnetic toroidal modes using artificially engineered multimetallic planar plasmonic resonators to detect Zika-virus envelope protein using a specific ZIKV antibody and envision that the proposed toroidal metasurface opens new avenues for developing low-cost, and efficient THz plAsmonic sensors for infection and targeted bioagent detection.