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The Coretec Group Provides the Latest Updates on its CSpace Technology Partnership with The University of Adelaide

The Coretec Group Provides the Latest Updates on its CSpace Technology Partnership with The University of Adelaide.

articleThe Coretec Group Inc.February 22, 20233/company/coretec-group-inc/news/the-coretec-group-provides-the-latest-updates-on-its-cspace-technology-partnership-with-the-university-of-adelaide
The Coretec Group Provides the Latest Updates on its CSpace Technology Partnership with The University of Adelaide

About this update from The Coretec Group Inc.

[{"type":"text","content":"\nThe Coretec Group (OTCQB: CRTG), developers of silicon anode active materials for lithium-ion batteries and cyclohexasilane (CHS) for EV, cleantech, and emerging tech applications, today provided an update on its partnership with The University of Adelaide, one of the top universities in the world in the field of glass science and photonics, to develop a glass display to be used in The Coretec Group’s CSpace, a 3D static volumetric display technology.\n\nCoretec’s CSpace technology controls two invisible infrared lasers to generate visible, 3D image pixels in an imaging chamber. The imaging chamber relies on rare earth ions that are dispersed within the chamber material to create visible pixels at the locations where the two lasers intersect. 3D images are created by scanning the two lasers across the imaging chamber material.\n\nThe Adelaide team is examining three types of alternative low-phonon-energy glasses that have a greater potential for mass manufacturing with high optical quality. As an initial, proof-of-concept step, the team fabricated four small-scale (1 inch) glasses, doped with the same amount of the rare earth ion Er3+ that can generate green image pixels using a dual-infrared laser system.\n\nAccording to preliminary results, the team found:\n\n\nTZN tellurite glass was dimmer than the reference ZBLAN fluoride glass, when both infrared lasers had continuous wave output. However, TZN was similar to or even brighter than ZBLAN when one or both of the infrared lasers had a pulsed output.\n\n\nOther glass types are far dimmer than ZBLAN under any cw/pulsed dual infrared laser scheme.\n\n\nFrom here, further investigation to understand the brightness change for TZN and ZBLAN under different cw/pulsed dual infrared laser schemes will be conducted. This will open a new pathway to advance the dual infrared laser-based 3D display concept and could broaden the selection of imaging chamber materials.\n\n“The results of our work with tellurite glass are very promising,” said Dr. Yunle Wei, at the University of Adelaide’s Institute for Photonics and Advanced Sensing (IPAS), working on the project. Professor Heike Ebendorff-Heidepriem, IPAS Deputy Director, who leads this research, said, “We are excited to continue our work with the Coretec Group. This work has the potential to address th...

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