Part 1 of 2: Computer Simulation Validates LIFETUNE Resonator Physics
Peer-Reviewed • ICICT Conference Proceedings • Published in Springer Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems (vol. 447) • DOI: 10.1007/978-981-19-1607-6_7
Two-Study Research Progression
① This Study (Simulation)
Computer simulation of the semiconductor wafer's electromagnetic response. Mathematical model predicts stable multi-frequency field distribution from the self-affine surface.
② Part 2 (Physical Proof)
2026 ICICT Thermal Imaging Study — Precision infrared imaging physically confirms the simulation. Thermal measurements prove the self-affine groove acts as a near-black-body cavity with emissivity up to ε ≈ 0.8.
Publication history: This work was first presented at an earlier ICICT conference, then selected for inclusion in the Springer Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems peer-reviewed proceedings — giving it dual publication in conference proceedings and a Springer-indexed volume.
Authors: Prof. Gennadi Lukyanov (ITMO University, St. Petersburg) • Prof. Alexander Kopyltsov (St. Petersburg State University of Aerospace Instrumentation) • Igor Serov (Human Genome Research Foundation, St. Petersburg)
Study Objective
This peer-reviewed Springer paper presents the first computer simulation of how a silicon wafer with a self-affine pattern — specifically the LIFETUNE resonator — responds to incident electromagnetic radiation. Using established electric polarization physics, the authors modeled charge distribution and field dynamics on the resonator surface to computationally predict its operating mechanism. The physical experimental confirmation of these predictions came in the follow-up 2026 thermal imaging study.
The LIFETUNE Resonator Object
The object studied is the LIFETUNE resonator: a silicon wafer with annular grooves 0.2 μm wide and 0.8 μm deep, whose pattern obeys the laws of self-similarity and scale invariance, constructed through affine transformations. This is the same self-affine structure that underlies all Aires Lifetune products.
Physical Mechanism Modeled: Charge Concentration in Grooves
The main mechanism is electric polarization: when an electric field interacts with the semiconductor, charge displacement occurs. Because the wafer is thinner in the groove regions, charge carrier concentration is higher under the grooves. When the potential reaches a critical value (φc), current arises along the shortest path between grooves, producing an induced electric field Eind = (φ1 − φ2)/l.
Simulation Result: Stable Multi-Frequency Field Predicted
The simulation shows waves of different lengths and orientations arising from the complex self-affine surface — an "orchestra" of interconnected wave processes. The key computational prediction: regardless of boundary conditions, after stabilization time ts, a stable multi-frequency distribution of the electric field is established. This was later physically confirmed by the 2026 thermal imaging measurements.
Key Conclusion: Resonator Acts as Radiation Transducer
The paper concludes: "The surface under consideration acts as a transducer of the radiation incident on it and gives a response in the form of a set of waves. When the period of incident electromagnetic radiation changes, the distribution of the electric field on the surface retains its character." The 2026 follow-up study physically verified this transducer behavior using precision infrared thermography.
Authors & Affiliations
Prof. Gennadi Lukyanov is based at ITMO University (Kronverksky Pr. 49, St. Petersburg), one of Russia's leading technical universities. Prof. Alexander Kopyltsov is at St. Petersburg State University of Aerospace Instrumentation. Igor Serov is director of the Human Genome Research Foundation. The paper appears in Springer's Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems (vol. 447), ICICT 2022 proceedings.