Recent advances in optimizing the efficiency and lifetime of far-UVC LEDs with emission wavelengths below 240 nm are presented. The design of the semiconductor heterostructure is considered as well as the chip layout. Cross-comparisons are used to draw general conclusions about degradation mechanisms in UV LEDs and to identify development strategies to minimize them. Furthermore, it is discussed which chip packaging is particularly suitable for a combination of far-UVC LEDs with spectral filters. Finally, far-UVC irradiation systems for skin-friendly irradiation of the human body are presented and their performance is illustrated with selected medical and biological data.
Far-UVC LEDs are interesting for applications such as skin-tolerant inactivation of multiresistant pathogens and gas sensing. We present the development of 233 nm AlGaN-based far-UVC LEDs with an emission power of 3 mW at 200 mA and L50 lifetime of more than 1000 h, after burn-in. Additionally, the design of a far-UVC LED-based irradiation system, with a spectral filter which supresses emission >240 nm, to study the inactivation of bacteria and skin compatibility of the radiation will be presented. The system can be used to homogeneously irradiate a target area of 70 mm diameter with a mean irradiance of 0.4 mW/cm².
Tomographic photoacoustic (PA) images acquired using a Fabry-Perot (FP) based scanner offer high resolution and image fidelity but can result in long acquisition times due to the need for raster scanning. To reduce the acquisition times, a parallelised camera-based PA signal detection scheme is developed. The scheme is based on using a sCMOScamera and FPI sensors with high homogeneity of optical thickness. PA signals were acquired using the camera-based setup and the signal to noise ratio (SNR) was measured. A comparison of the SNR of PA signal detected using 1) a photodiode in a conventional raster scanning detection scheme and 2) a sCMOS camera in parallelised detection scheme is made. The results show that the parallelised interrogation scheme has the potential to provide high speed PA imaging.
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