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Institution

Stevens Institute of Technology

EducationHoboken, New Jersey, United States
About: Stevens Institute of Technology is a education organization based out in Hoboken, New Jersey, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cognitive radio & Wireless network. The organization has 5440 authors who have published 12684 publications receiving 296875 citations. The organization is also known as: Stevens & Stevens Tech.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two production models are presented for maintaining current control of an industrial process under the surveillance of an np-control chart.
Abstract: Two production models are presented for maintaining current control of an industrial process under the surveillance of an np-control chart. The formulated cost function includes the cost of maintaining an np-control chart, search for the assignable caus..

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a methodology for optimal design of cooling systems for multi-cavity injection mold tooling by modeling the mold cooling design as a non-linear constrained optimization problem.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of various processing conditions such as temperature, hydrogen partial pressure, and residence time on Extent of HDO, hydrogen consumption, and space-time consumption were investigated using reduced sulfided NiMo/Al 2 O 3 catalyst.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Conceptual systems diagrams are used to map the different aspects of this relationship as outlined in the literature and identify the gaps that will need to be addressed to robustly understand the full impact of smart cities on the above-mentioned dimensions of urban sustainability.
Abstract: In recent literature, the concepts of smart, intelligent or cognitive cities have gained increasing attention as approaches for addressing the challenges of urban management. In smart city by having the right information at the right time, citizens, service providers, and city government will be able to make better decisions to increase quality of life for urban residents and the overall sustainability of the city. It is therefore stipulated that information resulting from a smart city implementation has a two-fold impact: 1) it changes the social behavior of citizens towards more efficient and sustainable utilization of city resources (bottom-up) and 2) it allows service providers (such as utilities and transit companies) and the city government to provide more efficient and sustainable services (top-down). There is an explicit need to understand the impacts of smart cities on urban environmental, social and economic sustainability from a holistic perspective. In this paper, we will use conceptual systems diagrams to map the different aspects of this relationship as outlined in the literature and identify the gaps that will need to be addressed to robustly understand the full impact of smart cities on the above-mentioned dimensions of urban sustainability.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article is the first report of net accumulative SERS from the full-length Ag-nanoparticlefunctionalized PCFs, and recommended and recently described in a brief study forward scattering as a more suitable detection mode to unambiguously assess the SERS-active nature of PCF.
Abstract: The integration of microfluidics with photonics on a single platform using well-established planar device technology has led to the emergence of the exciting field of optofluidics. As both a light guide and a liquid/gas transmission cell, photonic crystal fiber (PCF, also termed microstructured or holey fiber), synergistically combines microfluidics and optics in a single fiber with unprecedented light path length not readily achievable using planar optofluidics. PCF, an inherent optofluics platform, offers excellent prospects for a multitude of scientific and technological applications. The accessibility to the air channels of PCF has also opened up the possibility for functionalization of the channel surfaces (silica in nature) at the molecular and the nanometer scales, in particular to impart the functionality of surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) in PCF for sensing and detection. SERS, an ever advancing research field since its discovery in the 1970s, has tremendous potential for label-freemolecular identification at trace or even single-molecule levels due to up to 10 increase in the Raman scattering cross-section of a molecule in the presence of Ag or Au nanostructures. Seminal work has been reported on the development of 1D and 2D SERS substrates for a variety of sensing applications. The use of 3D geometry, i.e., substrates obtained by the deposition of noble nanoparticles onto porous silicon or porous aluminum membrane offered additional advantages of increased SERS intensity due to increased SERS probing area, as well as the membrane waveguiding properties. Specifically, several orders of magnitude higher SERS intensity, affording picoor zeptogram-level detection of explosives, has been demonstrated with porous alumina membranes containing 60-mm-long nanochannels, as compared to a solid planar substrate. SERS-active PCF optofluidics, as a special fiber optic SERS platform, offers easy system integration for in situ flow-through detection, and, more importantly, much longer light interaction length with analyte, thus promising to open a new vista in chemical/biological sensing, medical diagnosis, and process monitoring, especially in geometrically confined or sampling volume-limited systems. Various attempts have been made over the last several years to integrate SERS with the PCF platform by incorporating Ag or Au nanostructures albeit inside a very limited segment (typically a few centimeters) of the fiber air channels. Examples include deposition of Ag particulates and thin films by chemical vapor deposition at high pressure or coating of Ag and Au nanoparticles using colloidal solutions driven into the microscopic air channels via capillary force with backscattering as the typical data acquisition mode. Building uniform SERS functionality throughout the length of the PCF while preserving its light guide characteristics has remained elusive as measured Raman intensity is a combination of the accumulative gain from Raman scattering and the continuous loss from nanoparticle-induced light attenuation over the path length. As a result, we have recommended and recently described in a brief study forward scattering as a more suitable detection mode to unambiguously assess the SERS-active nature of PCF. To the best of our knowledge, this article is the first report of net accumulative SERS from the full-length Ag-nanoparticlefunctionalized PCFs. The finding has been enabled by a fine control of the coverage density of Ag nanoparticles and studies of a competitive interplay between SERS gain and light attenuation in the Raman intensity with PCFs of varying length. Using two different types of PCF, i.e., solid-core PCF and hollow-core PCF, we show that Raman gain in PCF prevails at relatively low nanoparticle coverage density (below 0.5 particlemm ), allowing full benefit of accumulation of Raman intensity along the fiber length for robust SERS sensing and enhanced measurement sensitivity. Light attenuation dominates at higher nanoparticle coverage density, however, diminishing the path-length benefit. Shown in Figure 1 are cross-sectional scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of solid-core PCFand hollow-core PCF used in this work. Also depicted in the figure is the light-guide process in the corresponding PCFs that contain immobilized Ag nanoparticles and are filled with aqueous solution throughout the cladding air channels for solid-core PCFand in the center air core only for hollow-core PCF. Note that light is guided via total internal reflectance in both cases. The presence of the aqueous solution in the cladding air channels does not fundamentally change the contrast of the higher index silica core and the lower index liquid-silica cladding in the solid-core PCF. The selective

85 citations


Authors

Showing all 5536 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Paul M. Thompson1832271146736
Roger Jones138998114061
Georgios B. Giannakis137132173517
Li-Jun Wan11363952128
Joel L. Lebowitz10175439713
David Smith10099442271
Derong Liu7760819399
Robert R. Clancy7729318882
Karl H. Schoenbach7549419923
Robert M. Gray7537139221
Jin Yu7448032123
Sheng Chen7168827847
Hui Wu7134719666
Amir H. Gandomi6737522192
Haibo He6648222370
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202342
2022139
2021765
2020820
2019799
2018563