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23 pages, 3756 KB  
Article
DAF-Aided ISAC Spatial Scattering Modulation for Multi-Hop V2V Networks
by Yajun Fan, Jiaqi Wu, Yabo Guo, Jing Yang, Le Zhao, Wencai Yan, Shangjun Yang, Haihua Ma and Chunhua Zhu
Sensors 2025, 25(19), 6189; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25196189 - 6 Oct 2025
Viewed by 223
Abstract
Integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) has emerged as a transformative technology for intelligent transportation systems. Index modulation (IM), recognized for its high robustness and energy efficiency (EE), has been successfully incorporated into ISAC systems. However, most existing IM-based ISAC schemes overlook the spatial [...] Read more.
Integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) has emerged as a transformative technology for intelligent transportation systems. Index modulation (IM), recognized for its high robustness and energy efficiency (EE), has been successfully incorporated into ISAC systems. However, most existing IM-based ISAC schemes overlook the spatial multiplexing potential of millimeter-wave channels and remain confined to single-hop vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) setups, failing to address the challenges of energy consumption and noise accumulation in real-world multi-hop V2V networks with complex road topologies. To bridge this gap, we propose a spatial scattering modulation-based ISAC (ISAC-SSM) scheme and introduce it to multi-hop V2V networks. The proposed scheme leverages the sensed positioning information to select maximum signal-to-noise ratio relay vehicles and employs a detect-amplify-and-forward (DAF) protocol to mitigate noise propagation, while utilizing sensed angle data for Doppler compensation to enhance communication reliability. At each hop, the transmitter modulates index bits on the angular-domain spatial directions of scattering clusters, achieving higher EE. We initially derive a closed-form bit error rate expression and Chernoff upper bound for the proposed DAF ISAC-SSM under multi-hop V2V networks. Both theoretical analyses and Monte Carlo simulations have been made and demonstrate the superiority of DAF ISAC-SSM over existing alternatives in terms of EE and error performance. Specifically, in a two-hop network with 12 scattering clusters, compared with DAF ISAC-conventional spatial multiplexing, DAF ISAC-maximum beamforming, and DAF ISAC-random beamforming, the proposed DAF ISAC-SSM scheme can achieve a coding gain of 1.5 dB, 2 dB, and 4 dB, respectively. Moreover, it shows robust performance with less than a 1.5 dB error degradation under 0.018 Doppler shifts, thereby verifying its superiority in practical vehicular environments. Full article
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16 pages, 2880 KB  
Article
Double-Layered Microphysiological System Made of Polyethylene Terephthalate with Trans-Epithelial Electrical Resistance Measurement Function for Uniform Detection Sensitivity
by Naokata Kutsuzawa, Hiroko Nakamura, Laner Chen, Ryota Fujioka, Shuntaro Mori, Noriyuki Nakatani, Takahiro Yoshioka and Hiroshi Kimura
Biosensors 2025, 15(10), 663; https://doi.org/10.3390/bios15100663 (registering DOI) - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 223
Abstract
Microphysiological systems (MPSs) have emerged as alternatives to animal testing in drug development, following the FDA Modernization Act 2.0. Double-layer channel-type MPS chips with porous membranes are widely used for modeling various organs, including the intestines, blood–brain barrier, renal tubules, and lungs. However, [...] Read more.
Microphysiological systems (MPSs) have emerged as alternatives to animal testing in drug development, following the FDA Modernization Act 2.0. Double-layer channel-type MPS chips with porous membranes are widely used for modeling various organs, including the intestines, blood–brain barrier, renal tubules, and lungs. However, these chips faced challenges owing to optical interference caused by light scattering from the porous membrane, which hinders cell observation. Trans-epithelial electrical resistance (TEER) measurement offers a non-invasive method for assessing barrier integrity in these chips. However, existing electrode-integrated MPS chips for TEER measurement have non-uniform current densities, leading to compromised measurement accuracy. Additionally, chips made from polydimethylsiloxane have been associated with drug absorption issues. This study developed an electrode-integrated MPS chip for TEER measurement with a uniform current distribution and minimal drug absorption. Through a finite element method simulation, electrode patterns were optimized and incorporated into a polyethylene terephthalate (PET)-based chip. The device was fabricated by laminating PET films, porous membranes, and patterned gold electrodes. The chip’s performance was evaluated using a perfused Caco-2 intestinal model. TEER levels increased and peaked on day 5 when cells formed a monolayer, and then they decreased with the development of villi-like structures. Concurrently, capacitance increased, indicating microvilli formation. Exposure to staurosporine resulted in a dose-dependent reduction in TEER, which was validated by immunostaining, indicating a disruption of the tight junction. This study presents a TEER measurement MPS platform with a uniform current density and reduced drug absorption, thereby enhancing TEER measurement reliability. This system effectively monitors barrier integrity and drug responses, demonstrating its potential for non-animal drug-testing applications. Full article
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27 pages, 3330 KB  
Article
Revealing Short-Term Memory Communication Channels Embedded in Alphabetical Texts: Theory and Experiments
by Emilio Matricciani
Information 2025, 16(10), 847; https://doi.org/10.3390/info16100847 - 30 Sep 2025
Viewed by 290
Abstract
The aim of the present paper is to further develop a theory on the flow of linguistic variables making a sentence, namely, the transformation of (a) characters into words; (b) words into word intervals; and (c) word intervals into sentences. The relationship between [...] Read more.
The aim of the present paper is to further develop a theory on the flow of linguistic variables making a sentence, namely, the transformation of (a) characters into words; (b) words into word intervals; and (c) word intervals into sentences. The relationship between two linguistic variables is studied as a communication channel whose performance is determined by the slope of their regression line and by their correlation coefficient. The mathematical theory is applicable to any field/specialty in which a linear relationship holds between two variables. The signal-to-noise ratio Γ is a figure of merit of a channel being “deterministic”, i.e., a channel in which the scattering of the data around the regression line is negligible. The larger Γ is, the more the channel is “deterministic”. In conclusion, humans have invented codes whose sequences of symbols that make words cannot vary very much when indicating single physical or mental objects of their experience (larger Γ). On the contrary, large variability (smaller Γ) is achieved by introducing interpunctions to make word intervals, and word intervals make sentences that communicate concepts. This theory can inspire new research lines in cognitive science research. Full article
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21 pages, 9052 KB  
Article
SAM–Attention Synergistic Enhancement: SAR Image Object Detection Method Based on Visual Large Model
by Yirong Yuan, Jie Yang, Lei Shi and Lingli Zhao
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(19), 3311; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17193311 - 26 Sep 2025
Viewed by 442
Abstract
The object detection model for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images needs to have strong generalization ability and more stable detection performance due to the complex scattering mechanism, high sensitivity of the orientation angle, and susceptibility to speckle noise. Visual large models possess strong [...] Read more.
The object detection model for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images needs to have strong generalization ability and more stable detection performance due to the complex scattering mechanism, high sensitivity of the orientation angle, and susceptibility to speckle noise. Visual large models possess strong generalization capabilities for natural image processing, but their application to SAR imagery remains relatively rare. This paper attempts to introduce a visual large model into the SAR object detection task, aiming to alleviate the problems of weak cross-domain generalization and poor adaptability to few-shot samples caused by the characteristics of SAR images in existing models. The proposed model comprises an image encoder, an attention module, and a detection decoder. The image encoder leverages the pre-trained Segment Anything Model (SAM) for effective feature extraction from SAR images. An Adaptive Channel Interactive Attention (ACIA) module is introduced to suppress SAR speckle noise. Further, a Dynamic Tandem Attention (DTA) mechanism is proposed in the decoder to integrate scale perception, spatial focusing, and task adaptation, while decoupling classification from detection for improved accuracy. Leveraging the strong representational and few-shot adaptation capabilities of large pre-trained models, this study evaluates their cross-domain and few-shot detection performance on SAR imagery. For cross-domain detection, the model was trained on AIR-SARShip-1.0 and tested on SSDD, achieving an mAP50 of 0.54. For few-shot detection on SAR-AIRcraft-1.0, using only 10% of the training samples, the model reached an mAP50 of 0.503. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Big Data Era: AI Technology for SAR and PolSAR Image)
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20 pages, 5553 KB  
Article
Transmit Power Optimization for Intelligent Reflecting Surface-Assisted Coal Mine Wireless Communication Systems
by Yang Liu, Xiaoyue Li, Bin Wang and Yanhong Xu
IoT 2025, 6(4), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/iot6040059 - 25 Sep 2025
Viewed by 245
Abstract
The adverse propagation environment in underground coal mine tunnels caused by enclosed spaces, rough surfaces, and dense scatterers severely degrades reliable wireless signal transmission, which further impedes the deployment of IoT applications such as gas monitors and personnel positioning terminals. However, the conventional [...] Read more.
The adverse propagation environment in underground coal mine tunnels caused by enclosed spaces, rough surfaces, and dense scatterers severely degrades reliable wireless signal transmission, which further impedes the deployment of IoT applications such as gas monitors and personnel positioning terminals. However, the conventional power enhancement solutions are infeasible for the underground coal mine scenario due to strict explosion-proof safety regulations and battery-powered IoT devices. To address this challenge, we propose singular value decomposition-based Lagrangian optimization (SVD-LOP) to minimize transmit power at the mining base station (MBS) for IRS-assisted coal mine wireless communication systems. In particular, we first establish a three-dimensional twin cluster geometry-based stochastic model (3D-TCGBSM) to accurately characterize the underground coal mine channel. On this basis, we formulate the MBS transmit power minimization problem constrained by user signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) target and IRS phase shifts. To solve this non-convex problem, we propose the SVD-LOP algorithm that performs SVD on the channel matrix to decouple the complex channel coupling and introduces the Lagrange multipliers. Furthermore, we develop a low-complexity successive convex approximation (LC-SCA) algorithm to reduce computational complexity, which constructs a convex approximation of the objective function based on a first-order Taylor expansion and enables suboptimal solutions. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed SVD-LOP and LC-SCA algorithms achieve transmit power peaks of 20.8dBm and 21.4dBm, respectively, which are slightly lower than the 21.8dBm observed for the SDR algorithm. It is evident that these algorithms remain well below the explosion-proof safety threshold, which achieves significant power reduction. However, computational complexity analysis reveals that the proposed SVD-LOP and LC-SCA algorithms achieve O(N3) and O(N2) respectively, which offers substantial reductions compared to the SDR algorithm’s O(N7). Moreover, both proposed algorithms exhibit robust convergence across varying user SNR targets while maintaining stable performance gains under different tunnel roughness scenarios. Full article
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13 pages, 1021 KB  
Article
Fractional Conductances of Wires: The S-Matrix Approach
by Rose Davies, Victor Kagalovsky and Igor V. Yurkevich
Crystals 2025, 15(9), 818; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15090818 - 18 Sep 2025
Viewed by 223
Abstract
Quasi-one-dimensional systems with multiple conduction channels are essential for describing a range of physical phenomena. In this paper, we analyse transport in wires where electrons are subject to arbitrary number of strong multi-particle backscattering terms. We present an exact calculation of the system’s [...] Read more.
Quasi-one-dimensional systems with multiple conduction channels are essential for describing a range of physical phenomena. In this paper, we analyse transport in wires where electrons are subject to arbitrary number of strong multi-particle backscattering terms. We present an exact calculation of the system’s scattering matrix and derive a formula for the two-terminal conductance. We find the conductance is reduced from its ideal value by a term corresponding to the projection of current fields onto the subspace of integer-valued vectors characterising the gapped channels created by the perturbations. Applying this result, we establish the minimal model required to reproduce the recently observed, yet unexplained, fractional conductance plateaus with even denominators. Full article
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19 pages, 6926 KB  
Article
Dynamic Illumination and Visual Enhancement of Surface Inspection Images of Turbid Underwater Concrete Structures
by Xiaoyan Xu, Jie Yang, Lin Cheng, Chunhui Ma, Fei Tong, Mingzhe Gao and Xiangyu Cao
Sensors 2025, 25(18), 5767; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25185767 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 314
Abstract
Aiming at the problem of image quality degradation caused by turbid water, non-uniform illumination, and scattering effect in the surface defect detection of underwater concrete structures, firstly, the concrete surface images under different shooting distances, different sediment concentrations, and different illumination conditions were [...] Read more.
Aiming at the problem of image quality degradation caused by turbid water, non-uniform illumination, and scattering effect in the surface defect detection of underwater concrete structures, firstly, the concrete surface images under different shooting distances, different sediment concentrations, and different illumination conditions were collected through laboratory experiments to simulate the concrete surface images of a reservoir dam with higher sediment concentration and deeper water depth. On this basis, an underwater image enhancement algorithm named DIVE (Dynamic Illumination and Vision Enhancement) is proposed. DIVE solves the problems of luminance unevenness and color deviation in stages through the illumination–scattering decoupling processing framework, and combines efficient computing optimization to achieve real-time processing. The lighting correction of Gaussian distributions (dynamic illumination module) was processed in stages with suspended particle scattering correction (visual enhancement module), and the bright and dark areas were balanced and color offset was corrected by local gamma correction in Lab space and dynamic decision-making of G/B channel. Through thread pool parallelization, vectorization and other technologies, the real-time requirement can be achieved at the resolution of 1920 × 1080. Tests show that DIVE significantly improves image quality in water bodies with sediment concentration up to 500 g/m3, and is suitable for complex scenes such as reservoirs, oceans, and sediment tanks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sensing and Imaging)
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21 pages, 6526 KB  
Article
Tissue Characterization by Ultrasound: Linking Envelope Statistics with Spectral Analysis for Simultaneous Attenuation Coefficient and Scatterer Clustering Quantification
by Luis Elvira, Carla de León, Carmen Durán, Alberto Ibáñez, Montserrat Parrilla and Óscar Martínez-Graullera
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(18), 9924; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15189924 - 10 Sep 2025
Viewed by 415
Abstract
This paper proposes the use of quantitative methods for the characterization of tissues by linking, into a single approach, ideas coming from the spectral analysis methods commonly used to determine the attenuation coefficient with the envelope statistics formulation. Initially, the Homodyned K-distribution model [...] Read more.
This paper proposes the use of quantitative methods for the characterization of tissues by linking, into a single approach, ideas coming from the spectral analysis methods commonly used to determine the attenuation coefficient with the envelope statistics formulation. Initially, the Homodyned K-distribution model used to fit data obtained from ultrasound signal envelopes was reviewed, and the necessary equations to further derive the attenuation coefficient from this model were developed. To test and discuss the performance of these methods, experimental work was conducted in phantoms. To this end, a series of tissue-mimicking materials composed of poly-vinyl alcohol (PVA) loaded with different particles (aluminium, alumina, cellulose) at varying concentrations were manufactured. A single-channel scanning system was employed to analyse these samples. It was verified that quantitative images obtained from the attenuation coefficient and from the scatterer clustering μ parameter (associated with scatterer concentration) effectively discriminate materials exhibiting similar echo envelope patterns, enhancing the information obtained in comparison with the conventional analysis based on B-scans. Additionally, the implementation of quantitative bi-parametric imaging mappings based on both the μ parameter and the attenuation coefficient, as a means to rapidly visualize results and identify areas characterized by specific acoustic features, was also proposed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applications of Ultrasonic Technology in Biomedical Sciences)
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21 pages, 18869 KB  
Article
MambaRA-GAN: Underwater Image Enhancement via Mamba and Intra-Domain Reconstruction Autoencoder
by Jiangyan Wu, Guanghui Zhang and Yugang Fan
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(9), 1745; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13091745 - 10 Sep 2025
Viewed by 324
Abstract
Underwater images frequently suffer from severe quality degradation due to light attenuation and scattering effects, manifesting as color distortion, low contrast, and detail blurring. These issues significantly impair the performance of downstream tasks. Therefore, underwater image enhancement (UIE) becomes a key technology to [...] Read more.
Underwater images frequently suffer from severe quality degradation due to light attenuation and scattering effects, manifesting as color distortion, low contrast, and detail blurring. These issues significantly impair the performance of downstream tasks. Therefore, underwater image enhancement (UIE) becomes a key technology to solve underwater image degradation. However, existing data-driven UIE methods typically rely on difficult-to-acquire paired data for training, severely limiting their practical applicability. To overcome this limitation, this study proposes MambaRA-GAN, a novel unpaired UIE framework built upon a CycleGAN architecture, which introduces a novel integration of Mamba and intra-domain reconstruction autoencoders. The key innovations of our work are twofold: (1) We design a generator architecture based on a Triple-Gated Mamba (TG-Mamba) block. This design dynamically allocates feature channels to three parallel branches via learnable weights, achieving optimal fusion of CNN’s local feature extraction capabilities and Mamba’s global modeling capabilities. (2) We construct an intra-domain reconstruction autoencoder, isomorphic to the generator, to quantitatively assess the quality of reconstructed images within the cycle consistency loss. This introduces more effective structural information constraints during training. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves significant improvements across five objective performance metrics. Visually, it effectively restores natural colors, enhances contrast, and preserves rich detail information, robustly validating its efficacy for the UIE task. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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30 pages, 1460 KB  
Systematic Review
Systematic Review of the Role of Kv4.x Potassium Channels in Neurodegenerative Diseases: Implications for Neuronal Excitability and Therapeutic Modulation
by Bárbara Teruel-Peña, Piedad Gómez-Torres, Sergio Galarreta-Aperte, Nora Suleiman-Martos, Isabel Prieto, Manuel Ramírez-Sánchez, Carmen M. Fernández-Martos and Germán Domínguez-Vías
Physiologia 2025, 5(3), 31; https://doi.org/10.3390/physiologia5030031 - 10 Sep 2025
Viewed by 653
Abstract
Background/Objectives: The voltage-gated potassium channels of the Kv4 family (Kv4.1, Kv4.2, Kv4.3) regulate neuronal excitability and synaptic integration. The dysregulation of these channels has been linked to neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), spinocerebellar ataxias, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), prion diseases, and [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: The voltage-gated potassium channels of the Kv4 family (Kv4.1, Kv4.2, Kv4.3) regulate neuronal excitability and synaptic integration. The dysregulation of these channels has been linked to neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), spinocerebellar ataxias, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), prion diseases, and Parkinson’s disease (PD). Current evidence is scattered across diverse models, and a systematic synthesis is lacking. This review seeks to compile and analyze data on Kv4 channel alterations in neurodegeneration, focusing on genetic variants, functional changes, and phenotypic consequences. Methods: A systematic search was conducted for peer-reviewed studies, including human participants, human-derived cell models, and relevant animal models. Studies were considered eligible if they investigated Kv4.1–Kv4.3 (encoded by gene encoding the Kv4.1-Kv4.3 α-subunit of voltage-gated A-type potassium channels (KCND1-KCND3)) expression, function, or genetic variants, as well as associated auxiliary subunits such as DPP6 (dipeptidyl peptidase–like protein 6) and KChIP2 (Kv channel–interacting protein 2), in neurodegenerative diseases. Both observational and experimental designs were considered. Data extraction included disease type, model, Kv4 subunit, functional or genetic findings, and key outcomes. Risk of bias was assessed in all included studies. Results: Kv4 channels exhibit significant functional and expression changes in various neurodegenerative diseases. In AD and prionopathies, reduced Kv4.1- and Kv4.2-mediated currents contribute to neuronal hyperexcitability. In spinocerebellar ataxias, KCND3 mutations cause loss- or gain-of-function phenotypes in Kv4.3, disrupting cerebellar signaling. In models of ALS and PD, Kv4 dysfunction correlates with altered neuronal excitability and can be modulated pharmacologically. Subunit modulators such as DPP6 and KChIP2 influence channel function and could represent therapeutic targets. Conclusions: Kv4 channels are crucial for neuronal excitability in multiple neurodegenerative contexts. Dysregulation through genetic or pathological mechanisms contributes to functional deficits, highlighting Kv4 channels as promising targets for interventions aimed at restoring electrical homeostasis and mitigating early neuronal dysfunction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Papers in Human Physiology—3rd Edition)
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23 pages, 7046 KB  
Article
Atmospheric Scattering Prior Embedded Diffusion Model for Remote Sensing Image Dehazing
by Shanqin Wang and Miao Zhang
Atmosphere 2025, 16(9), 1065; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16091065 - 10 Sep 2025
Viewed by 560
Abstract
Remote sensing image dehazing presents substantial challenges in balancing physical fidelity with generative flexibility, particularly under complex atmospheric conditions and sensor-specific degradation patterns. Traditional physics-based methods often struggle with nonlinear haze distributions, while purely data-driven approaches tend to lack interpretability and physical consistency. [...] Read more.
Remote sensing image dehazing presents substantial challenges in balancing physical fidelity with generative flexibility, particularly under complex atmospheric conditions and sensor-specific degradation patterns. Traditional physics-based methods often struggle with nonlinear haze distributions, while purely data-driven approaches tend to lack interpretability and physical consistency. To bridge this gap, we propose the Atmospheric Scattering Prior embedded Diffusion Model (ASPDiff), a novel framework that seamlessly integrates atmospheric physics into the diffusion-based generative restoration process. ASPDiff establishes a closed-loop feedback mechanism by embedding the atmospheric scattering model as a physics-driven regularization throughout both the forward degradation simulation and the reverse denoising trajectory. The framework operates through the following three synergistic components: (1) an Atmospheric Prior Estimation Module that uses the Dark Channel Prior to generate initial estimates of the transmission map and global atmospheric light, which are then refined through learnable adjustment networks; (2) a Diffusion Process with Atmospheric Prior Embedding, where the refined priors serve as conditional guidance during the reverse diffusion sampling, ensuring physical plausibility; and (3) a Haze-Aware Refinement Module that adaptively enhances structural details and compensates for residual haze via frequency-aware decomposition and spatial attention. Extensive experiments on both synthetic and real-world remote sensing datasets demonstrate that ASPDiff significantly outperforms existing methods, achieving state-of-the-art performance while maintaining strong physical interpretability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Atmospheric Techniques, Instruments, and Modeling)
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7 pages, 11536 KB  
Communication
Optimizing Thermomechanical Processing for Producing Bulk Fine-Grained Aluminum Alloy with Thermal Stability
by Jesada Punyafu, Chonlada Domrong, Ussadawut Patakham, Mitsuhiro Murayama and Chaiyasit Banjongprasert
Materials 2025, 18(17), 4180; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18174180 - 5 Sep 2025
Viewed by 669
Abstract
This study investigates the thermal stability of fine-grained structures achieved through different severe plastic deformation (SPD) and heat treatment paths. Bulk fine-grained Al-0.1Sc-0.1Zr (wt%) alloy was produced via equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) using routes Bc or C, with aging before or after [...] Read more.
This study investigates the thermal stability of fine-grained structures achieved through different severe plastic deformation (SPD) and heat treatment paths. Bulk fine-grained Al-0.1Sc-0.1Zr (wt%) alloy was produced via equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) using routes Bc or C, with aging before or after the ECAP. Electron back-scattered diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses demonstrate excellent thermal stability of all four specimens. They maintain mean grain sizes below 5 μm after a 10 h thermal test at 450 °C, attributed to the presence of nano Al3(Sc,Zr) precipitates within the microstructures. Route Bc in the ECAP method forms more stable high-angle grain boundaries (HAGBs) than route C. Whether aging occurs before or after the ECAP, similar microstructural changes are observed after thermal testing, allowing fine-tuning of the microstructure depending on the application or subsequent processes. Full article
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11 pages, 4728 KB  
Article
Identification of Interacting Objects and Evaluation of Interaction Loss from Wideband Double-Directional Channel Measurement Data by Using Point Cloud Data
by Djiby Marema Diallo and Jun-ichi Takada
Electronics 2025, 14(17), 3495; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14173495 - 31 Aug 2025
Viewed by 444
Abstract
This paper proposes an approach to identify interacting objects (IOs) and determine their interaction losses (ILs) using point cloud data from wide-band double-directional channel sounding data. The scattering points (SPs) were identified using the maximum likelihood-based approach applied to the high-resolution path parameters [...] Read more.
This paper proposes an approach to identify interacting objects (IOs) and determine their interaction losses (ILs) using point cloud data from wide-band double-directional channel sounding data. The scattering points (SPs) were identified using the maximum likelihood-based approach applied to the high-resolution path parameters estimated from the channel sounding data, and then IOs were identified via visual inspection of SPs within a 3D point cloud. The proposed approach utilizes all path parameters to calculate the approximate likelihood function for all candidate SPs to determine the SP, regardless of the propagation mechanism. The proposed technique was demonstrated at a suburban residential site with a frequency of 11 GHz. The results show that IOs that are not usually considered in the ray-tracing simulation were identified. Full article
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16 pages, 1205 KB  
Article
Design and Simulation of Cross-Medium Two-Hop Relaying Free-Space Optical Communication System Based on Multiple Diversity and Multiplexing Technologies
by Min Guo, Pengxiang Wang and Yan Wu
Photonics 2025, 12(9), 867; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12090867 - 28 Aug 2025
Viewed by 666
Abstract
To address the issues of link mismatch and channel impairment in wireless optical communication across atmospheric-oceanic media, this paper proposes a two-hop relay transmission architecture based on the multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO)-enhanced multi-level hybrid multiplexing. The system implements decode-and-forward operations via maritime buoy/ship relays, [...] Read more.
To address the issues of link mismatch and channel impairment in wireless optical communication across atmospheric-oceanic media, this paper proposes a two-hop relay transmission architecture based on the multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO)-enhanced multi-level hybrid multiplexing. The system implements decode-and-forward operations via maritime buoy/ship relays, achieving physical layer isolation between atmospheric and oceanic channels. The transmitter employs coherent orthogonal frequency division multiplexing technology with quadrature amplitude modulation to achieve frequency division multiplexing of baseband signals, combines with orthogonal polarization modulation to generate polarization-multiplexed signal beams, and finally realizes multi-dimensional signal transmission through MIMO spatial diversity. To cope with cross-medium environmental interference, a composite channel model is established, which includes atmospheric turbulence (Gamma–Gamma model), rain attenuation, and oceanic chlorophyll absorption and scattering effects. Simulation results show that the multi-level hybrid multiplexing method can significantly improve the data transmission rate of the system. Since the system adopts three channels of polarization-state data, the data transmission rate is increased by 200%; the two-hop relay method can effectively improve the communication performance of cross-medium optical communication and fundamentally solve the problem of light transmission in cross-medium planes; the use of MIMO technology has a compensating effect on the impacts of both atmospheric and marine environments, and as the number of light beams increases, the system performance can be further improved. This research provides technical implementation schemes and reference data for the design of high-capacity optical communication systems across air-sea media. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging Technologies for 6G Space Optical Communication Networks)
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15 pages, 1850 KB  
Article
Adaptive Transmission Performance of Underwater Autoencoder Group Based on DNN Channel Estimation
by Dan Chen, Jiongxuan Li and Rui Wang
Photonics 2025, 12(9), 865; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics12090865 - 28 Aug 2025
Viewed by 605
Abstract
Autoencoders can leverage deep neural networks to jointly optimize transmitters and receivers for end-to-end communication performance. The time-varying characteristics of underwater channels due to turbulence, absorption, and scattering seriously affect the reliability of autoencoder-based underwater wireless optical communication (UWOC) systems. In order to [...] Read more.
Autoencoders can leverage deep neural networks to jointly optimize transmitters and receivers for end-to-end communication performance. The time-varying characteristics of underwater channels due to turbulence, absorption, and scattering seriously affect the reliability of autoencoder-based underwater wireless optical communication (UWOC) systems. In order to reduce the need for complex online training of autoencoders in real underwater channels, we propose a deep autoencoder group adaptive transmission scheme, which can adaptively select the optimal autoencoder group at the transmitter side for signaling based on the instantaneous channel state information (CSI) estimation obtained using a deep neural network (DNN) during the online transmission process, thus suppressing the underwater effect of the time-varying channel. The selection of the optimal number of encoders in the autoencoder group can balance the error performance and complexity of the system, as well as reduce the complexity of the system while ensuring the reliability of the adaptive transmission system. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Optical Communication and Network)
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