Polski

New Method - Observing how materials emit polarized light

588
2025-07-04 10:46:38
Zobacz tłumaczenie

Many materials emit light in ways that encode information in its polarization. According to researchers at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland, polarization is key for future technologies, from quantum computers to secure communication and holographic displays.
Among such phenomena is a form known as circularly polarized luminescence (CPL), a special type of light emission produced by chiral materials, in which light waves spiral either left or right as they travel.

 



Standard CPL techniques are often slow, narrowly focused, or unable to pick up faint signals, says EPFL, especially when studying advanced materials with fleeting or subtle polarization effects. These limitations have slowed the quest to fully understand how chiral materials interact with light.

Now, a team led by Professor Sascha Feldmann at EPFL’s Laboratory for Energy Materials has developed a high-sensitivity, broadband, time-resolved spectroscopy technique that captures the complete set of polarization states (the so-called "Stokes vector"). The work, including shared blueprints, is described in Nature.

Wide window

The new technique does this across a wide spectral window (400–900 nm), and at time intervals ranging from just nanoseconds up to several milliseconds, all with a noise floor as low as one ten-thousandth the intensity of the polarized light being emitted by a material. The new technique also captures linear and circular polarization signals at the same time, which helps identify and correct for polarization artifacts that often disrupt other methods.

The EPFL team says it designed the instrument “with straightforward, off-the-shelf components, making it widely adoptable.” They are sharing the full optical schematics and a compendium of “non-obvious” error sources to open the field up for others.
They used an electronically-gated camera and polarization optics to record the full Stokes vector in real time, tracking changes in light emission from different types of molecules that feature both strong and weak polarized luminescence. By recording the complete polarization fingerprint, the new set up can uncover details that other approaches miss, says EPFL.

 



The new approach successfully captured polarization changes in materials that had never been tracked in such detail before. It reproduced benchmark results for well-studied molecules, and it revealed previously unseen dynamics in organic emitters and complex systems where light emission happens on both fast and slow timescales.

With its combination of high sensitivity, wide spectral coverage, and nanosecond time resolution, the technique is said to open an unprecedented window onto the realm of excited-state polarization dynamics and symmetry-breaking. The team has also made their blueprints and automation algorithms public in an effort to democratize the field and help speed up discoveries worldwide.

Source: optics.org

Powiązane rekomendacje
  • The future potential of underwater laser applications is unlimited

    The foundation of offshore wind turbines, port protection systems, steel sheet piles, river barriers, water gates, and even pipelines can all be directly processed in water. Another application area is the dismantling of abandoned nuclear reactors, in which case laser technology can gently dismantle steel structures underwater while minimizing the dissolution of radioactive materials.The ocean, wh...

    06-03
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Zhuoli Laser South Korea Branch Officially Opened

    In recent years, the performance of Chinese laser technology enterprises in the international market has become increasingly eye-catching. On September 20th, under the joint witness of nearly a hundred customer representatives from various industries in South Korea, the opening ceremony of Zhuolai Laser South Korea Branch was officially held.The branch is located in the Gyeonggi do region of south...

    2023-09-23
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Developing nanocavities for enhancing nanoscale lasers and LEDs

    As humanity enters a new era of computing, new small tools are needed to enhance the interaction between photons and electrons, and integrate electrical and photon functions at the nanoscale. Researchers have created a novel III-V semiconductor nanocavity that can limit light below the so-called diffraction limit, which is an important step towards achieving this goal.In the journal Optical Materi...

    2024-01-29
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Fraunhofer ILT develops laser beam shaping platform to optimize PBF-LB process

    Recently, the German research institution Fraunhofer ILT team is collaborating with the Department of Optical Systems Technology (TOS) at RWTH Aachen University to develop a testing system aimed at studying complex laser beam profiles using a new platform. This platform can construct customized beam profiles for laser powder melting (PBF-LB) 3D printing, thereby improving part quality, process sta...

    2024-12-23
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Nankai University makes progress in the field of free electron photon interactions

    Recently, a research team led by Professor Cai Wei and Professor Xu Jingjun from the School of Physical Sciences at Nankai University has experimentally confirmed for the first time the generation of polaritons, also known as Smith Purcell radiation, at the two-dimensional scale, and further demonstrated the ability of free electrons to regulate two-dimensional Smith Purcell radiation. The researc...

    02-11
    Zobacz tłumaczenie