Ali Javey (Advisor)

Research Advised by Professor Ali Javey

Javey Group:  List of Projects | List of Researchers

Flexible Vanadium Dioxide Photodetectors for Visible to Longwave Infrared Detection at Room Temperature

Sivacarendran Balendhran
Mohammad Taha
Shifan Wang
Wei Yan
Naoki Higashitarumizu
Dingchen Wen
Nima Sefidmooye Azar
James Bullock
Paul Mulvaney
Ali Javey
2023

Flexible optoelectronics is a rapidly growing field, with a wide range of potential applications. From wearable sensors to bendable solar cells, curved displays, and curved focal plane arrays, the possibilities are endless. The criticality of flexible photodetectors for many of these applications is acknowledged, however, devices that are demonstrated thus far are limited in their spectral range. In this study, flexible photodetectors are demonstrated using a VOx nanoparticle ink, with an extremely broad operating wavelength range of 0.4 to 20 µm. This ink is synthesized using a simple and...

Javey Lab: Berkeley Engineers Develop Multicolored Light-Emitting Array on a Single Chip

May 10, 2023

An array of light-emitting devices with 49 different, individually addressable colors.

An array of light-emitting devices with 49 different, individually addressable colors. (Image by Vivian Wang) With limitless colors, the device may lead to advances in spectroscopy May 10, 2023 by Marni Ellery

Multicolored light-...

Wenbo Ji

Former Graduate Student Researcher
Materials Science & Engineering
Professor Ali Javey (Advisor)
Ph.D. 2022 (Anticipated)

Enhanced Neutral Exciton Diffusion in Monolayer WS 2 by Exciton–Exciton Annihilation

Shiekh Zia Uddin
Naoki Higashitarumizu
Hyungjin Kim
Jun Yi
Xiang Zhang
Daryl Chrzan
Ali Javey
2022
2 ABSTRACT: Dominant recombination pathways in monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) depend primarily on background carrier concentration, generation rate and applied strain. Charged excitons formed in the presence of background carriers mainly recombine nonradiatively. Neutral excitons recombine completely radiatively at low generation rates, but experience nonradiative exciton-exciton annihilation (EEA) at high generation rates. Strain can suppress EEA resulting in near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield (PL QY) at all exciton densities. Although exciton diffusion is the...

Efficiency Roll-Off Free Electroluminescence from Monolayer WSe2

Shiekh Zia Uddin
Naoki Higashitarumizu
Hyungjin Kim
I K M Reaz Rahman
Ali Javey
2022
Exciton-exciton annihilation (EEA) is a nonradiative process commonly observed in excitonic materials at high exciton densities. Like Auger recombination, EEA degrades luminescence efficiency at high exciton densities and causes efficiency roll-off in light-emitting devices. Near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield has been demonstrated in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) at all exciton densities with optimal band structure modification mediated by strain. Although the recombination pathways in TMDCs are well understood, the practical application of light-emitting devices has...

Tape-Free, Digital Wearable Band for Exercise Sweat Rate Monitoring

Manik Dautta
Luis Fernando Ayala-Cardona
Noelle Davis
Ashwin Aggarwal
Jonghwa Park
Shu Wang
Liam Gillan
Elina Jansson
Mikko Hietala
Hyunhyub Ko
Jussi Hiltunen
Ali Javey
2023
Monitoring sweat secretion rate is essential for uncovering underlying physical conditions like hyperhidrosis, mental stress, and neural disorders. Often, flexible microfluidic sweat rate monitoring devices use tape as a means of attachment to the skin to tightly seal the collection area. While these single-use, adhesive-backed devices have lightweight and thin interfaces for mounting on the skin, their form factor complicates their potential integration with available commercial wearables, such as smartwatches. Here, a tape-free device, consisting of a 3D-printed sweat collector with a...

Drug Monitoring with Wearable Sweat Sensors

Li-Chia Tai
2022

Wearable sensors have been very popular among us to monitor our physical wellness, and they are potentially important for health monitoring with implications toward preventive care and clinical treatment. On the market, noninvasive wearables can be used to track external metrics such as heart rate and ECG signal. However, they fail to inform users about elusive biomarkers at the molecular level, which can potentially provide more insight into a person’s health situation. Traditionally, accessing bio-molecular information requires collecting blood or urine samples with invasive extraction...

Manik Dautta

Postdoctoral Researcher
Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences
Professor Ali Javey (Advisor)
PostDoc 2022

Niharika Gupta

Graduate Student Researcher
Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences
Professor Ali Javey (Advisor)
Ph.D. 2022