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- All Subjects: Imaging
- Creators: Aberle, James
- Creators: Alarcon, Ricardo
- Creators: Barber, Anne Christine
- Status: Published
Description
The Arizona State University Herbarium began in 1896 when Professor Fredrick Irish collected the first recorded Arizona specimen for what was then called the Tempe Normal School - a Parkinsonia microphylla. Since then, the collection has grown to approximately 400,000 specimens of vascular plants and lichens. The most recent project includes the digitization - both the imaging and databasing - of approximately 55,000 vascular plant specimens from Latin America. To accomplish this efficiently, possibilities in non-traditional methods, including both new and existing technologies, were explored. SALIX (semi-automatic label information extraction) was developed as the central tool to handle automatic parsing, along with BarcodeRenamer (BCR) to automate image file renaming by barcode. These two developments, combined with existing technologies, make up the SALIX Method. The SALIX Method provides a way to digitize herbarium specimens more efficiently than the traditional approach of entering data solely through keystroking. Using digital imaging, optical character recognition, and automatic parsing, I found that the SALIX Method processes data at an average rate that is 30% faster than typing. Data entry speed is dependent on user proficiency, label quality, and to a lesser degree, label length. This method is used to capture full specimen records, including close-up images where applicable. Access to biodiversity data is limited by the time and resources required to digitize, but I have found that it is possible to do so at a rate that is faster than typing. Finally, I experiment with the use of digital field guides in advancing access to biodiversity data, to stimulate public engagement in natural history collections.
ContributorsBarber, Anne Christine (Author) / Landrum, Leslie R. (Thesis advisor) / Wojciechowski, Martin F. (Thesis advisor) / Gilbert, Edward (Committee member) / Lafferty, Daryl (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
Description
The challenge of radiation therapy is to maximize the dose to the tumor while simultaneously minimizing the dose elsewhere. Proton therapy is well suited to this challenge due to the way protons slow down in matter. As the proton slows down, the rate of energy loss per unit path length continuously increases leading to a sharp dose near the end of range. Unlike conventional radiation therapy, protons stop inside the patient, sparing tissue beyond the tumor. Proton therapy should be superior to existing modalities, however, because protons stop inside the patient, there is uncertainty in the range. “Range uncertainty” causes doctors to take a conservative approach in treatment planning, counteracting the advantages offered by proton therapy. Range uncertainty prevents proton therapy from reaching its full potential.
A new method of delivering protons, pencil-beam scanning (PBS), has become the new standard for treatment over the past few years. PBS utilizes magnets to raster scan a thin proton beam across the tumor at discrete locations and using many discrete pulses of typically 10 ms duration each. The depth is controlled by changing the beam energy. The discretization in time of the proton delivery allows for new methods of dose verification, however few devices have been developed which can meet the bandwidth demands of PBS.
In this work, two devices have been developed to perform dose verification and monitoring with an emphasis placed on fast response times. Measurements were performed at the Mayo Clinic. One detector addresses range uncertainty by measuring prompt gamma-rays emitted during treatment. The range detector presented in this work is able to measure the proton range in-vivo to within 1.1 mm at depths up to 11 cm in less than 500 ms and up to 7.5 cm in less than 200 ms. A beam fluence detector presented in this work is able to measure the position and shape of each beam spot. It is hoped that this work may lead to a further maturation of detection techniques in proton therapy, helping the treatment to reach its full potential to improve the outcomes in patients.
A new method of delivering protons, pencil-beam scanning (PBS), has become the new standard for treatment over the past few years. PBS utilizes magnets to raster scan a thin proton beam across the tumor at discrete locations and using many discrete pulses of typically 10 ms duration each. The depth is controlled by changing the beam energy. The discretization in time of the proton delivery allows for new methods of dose verification, however few devices have been developed which can meet the bandwidth demands of PBS.
In this work, two devices have been developed to perform dose verification and monitoring with an emphasis placed on fast response times. Measurements were performed at the Mayo Clinic. One detector addresses range uncertainty by measuring prompt gamma-rays emitted during treatment. The range detector presented in this work is able to measure the proton range in-vivo to within 1.1 mm at depths up to 11 cm in less than 500 ms and up to 7.5 cm in less than 200 ms. A beam fluence detector presented in this work is able to measure the position and shape of each beam spot. It is hoped that this work may lead to a further maturation of detection techniques in proton therapy, helping the treatment to reach its full potential to improve the outcomes in patients.
ContributorsHolmes, Jason M (Author) / Alarcon, Ricardo (Thesis advisor) / Bues, Martin (Committee member) / Galyaev, Eugene (Committee member) / Chamberlin, Ralph (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
Description
Readout Integrated Circuits(ROICs) are important components of infrared(IR) imag
ing systems. Performance of ROICs affect the quality of images obtained from IR
imaging systems. Contemporary infrared imaging applications demand ROICs that
can support large dynamic range, high frame rate, high output data rate, at low
cost, size and power. Some of these applications are military surveillance, remote
sensing in space and earth science missions and medical diagnosis. This work focuses
on developing a ROIC unit cell prototype for National Aeronautics and Space Ad
ministration(NASA), Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s(JPL’s) space applications. These
space applications also demand high sensitivity, longer integration times(large well
capacity), wide operating temperature range, wide input current range and immunity
to radiation events such as Single Event Latchup(SEL).
This work proposes a digital ROIC(DROIC) unit cell prototype of 30ux30u size,
to be used mainly with NASA JPL’s High Operating Temperature Barrier Infrared
Detectors(HOT BIRDs). Current state of the art DROICs achieve a dynamic range
of 16 bits using advanced 65-90nm CMOS processes which adds a lot of cost overhead.
The DROIC pixel proposed in this work uses a low cost 180nm CMOS process and
supports a dynamic range of 20 bits operating at a low frame rate of 100 frames per
second(fps), and a dynamic range of 12 bits operating at a high frame rate of 5kfps.
The total electron well capacity of this DROIC pixel is 1.27 billion electrons, enabling
integration times as long as 10ms, to achieve better dynamic range. The DROIC unit
cell uses an in-pixel 12-bit coarse ADC and an external 8-bit DAC based fine ADC.
The proposed DROIC uses layout techniques that make it immune to radiation up to
300krad(Si) of total ionizing dose(TID) and single event latch-up(SEL). It also has a
wide input current range from 10pA to 1uA and supports detectors operating from
Short-wave infrared (SWIR) to longwave infrared (LWIR) regions.
ing systems. Performance of ROICs affect the quality of images obtained from IR
imaging systems. Contemporary infrared imaging applications demand ROICs that
can support large dynamic range, high frame rate, high output data rate, at low
cost, size and power. Some of these applications are military surveillance, remote
sensing in space and earth science missions and medical diagnosis. This work focuses
on developing a ROIC unit cell prototype for National Aeronautics and Space Ad
ministration(NASA), Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s(JPL’s) space applications. These
space applications also demand high sensitivity, longer integration times(large well
capacity), wide operating temperature range, wide input current range and immunity
to radiation events such as Single Event Latchup(SEL).
This work proposes a digital ROIC(DROIC) unit cell prototype of 30ux30u size,
to be used mainly with NASA JPL’s High Operating Temperature Barrier Infrared
Detectors(HOT BIRDs). Current state of the art DROICs achieve a dynamic range
of 16 bits using advanced 65-90nm CMOS processes which adds a lot of cost overhead.
The DROIC pixel proposed in this work uses a low cost 180nm CMOS process and
supports a dynamic range of 20 bits operating at a low frame rate of 100 frames per
second(fps), and a dynamic range of 12 bits operating at a high frame rate of 5kfps.
The total electron well capacity of this DROIC pixel is 1.27 billion electrons, enabling
integration times as long as 10ms, to achieve better dynamic range. The DROIC unit
cell uses an in-pixel 12-bit coarse ADC and an external 8-bit DAC based fine ADC.
The proposed DROIC uses layout techniques that make it immune to radiation up to
300krad(Si) of total ionizing dose(TID) and single event latch-up(SEL). It also has a
wide input current range from 10pA to 1uA and supports detectors operating from
Short-wave infrared (SWIR) to longwave infrared (LWIR) regions.
ContributorsPraveen, Subramanya Chilukuri (Author) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Thesis advisor) / Kitchen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Long, Yu (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
Description
This work focuses on the analysis and design of large-scale millimeter-wave andterahertz (mmWave/THz) beamforming apertures (e.g., reconfigurable reflective surfaces–
RRSs). As such, the small wavelengths and ample bandwidths of these frequencies enable
the development of high-spatial-resolution imaging and high-throughput wireless
communication systems that leverage electrically large apertures to form high-gain
steerable beams.
For the rigorous evaluation of these systems’ performance in realistic application
scenarios, full-wave simulations are needed to capture all the exhibited electromagnetic
phenomena. However, the small wavelengths of mmWave/THz bands lead to enormous
meshes in conventional full-wave simulators. Thus, a novel numerical decomposition
technique is presented, which decomposes the full-wave models in smaller domains with
less meshed elements, enabling their computationally efficient analysis. Thereafter, this
method is leveraged to study a novel radar configuration that employs a rotating linear
antenna with beam steering capabilities to form 3D images. This imaging process requires
fewer elements to carry out high-spatial-resolution imaging compared to traditional 2D
phased arrays, constituting a perfect candidate in low-profile, low-cost applications.
Afterward, a high-yield nanofabrication technique for mmWave/THz graphene
switches is presented. The measured graphene sheet impedances are incorporated into
equivalent circuit models of coplanar switches to identify the optimum mmWave/THz
switch topology that would enable the development of large-scale RRSs.ii
Thereon, the process of integrating the optimized graphene switches into largescale mmWave/THz RRSs is detailed. The resulting RRSs enable dynamic beam steering
achieving 4-bits of phase quantization –for the first time in the known literature–
eliminating the parasitic lobes and increasing the aperture efficiency. Furthermore, the
devised multi-bit configurations use a single switch-per-bit topology retaining low system
complexity and RF losses. Finally, single-bit RRSs are modified to offer single-lobe
patterns by employing a surface randomization technique. This approach allows for the use
of low-complexity single-bit configurations to suppress the undesired quantization lobes
without residing to the use of sophisticated multi-bit topologies.
The presented concepts pave the road toward the implementation and proliferation
of large-scale reconfigurable beamforming apertures that can serve both as mmWave/THz
imagers and as relays or base stations in future wireless communication applications.
ContributorsTheofanopoulos, Panagiotis (Author) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Balanis, Constantine (Committee member) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Bliss, Dan (Committee member) / Groppi, Christopher (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
Description
Dynamic metasurface antennas (DMAs) consist of waveguides patterned with numerous metamaterial radiators loaded with switchable components (such as varactors). Byapplying different direct current (DC) signals to each element, DMAs can generate a multitude of radiation patterns ranging from directive beams useful for wireless communication to spatially diverse ones useful for computational imaging and sensing. In this thesis,
DMAs are extended to conformal configurations. Using full-wave simulation, it is shown
that a conformal DMA can detect the angle of the incident signal over the horizon using a
two port device at a single frequency. The design and operation of the conformal DMA will
be detailed. In addition, it shows that DMAs can be implemented using a single substrate
layer, significantly simplifying its structure compared to conventional multiple-layer ones.
Using full-wave simulation, this thesis demonstrates a mechanism to bring DC signal to
metamaterial elements without requiring an extra layer. This design can be instrumental in
implementing the conformal DMA in the future
AoA detection was achieved over unique diode distributions of the conformal DCMA
at a 10-degree resolution. Investigations into additive noise of the simulated measured
data as well as the minimum amount of diode distributions to accurately detect AoA were
conducted and documented within this thesis. The single-layer DMA yielded both directive
and complex patterns that allow for many potential applications. With success in bringing
the DC signal to the metamaterial elements on a single-layer, further advances in conformal
DMAs can be achieved.
ContributorsWilliams, Travis Hugh (Author) / Imani, Seyedmohammadreza F (Thesis advisor) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024