Türkçe

Research has found that inorganic perovskite materials are easy to prepare and process, making them suitable for manufacturing lasers

218
2024-01-04 14:19:29
Çeviriyi gör

According to research from Busan National University, inorganic perovskite materials are easy to prepare and process, making them suitable for manufacturing lasers.
The perovskite of interest is CsPbBr3, which must form "nanosheets" within the specific structure invented by the Busan team to obtain sufficient laser gain.

It is not that the laser has been achieved, as the research project aims to characterize these nanosheets in terms of gain, temperature, and other parameters to provide data for designing future lasers.

According to the university, the team "achieved enhanced signal amplification in nanosheets through unique waveguide patterns, thereby enhancing gain and thermal stability.". These advances have had a wide-ranging impact on the applications of lasers, sensors, and solar cells, and may also affect areas such as environmental monitoring, industrial processes, and healthcare.

Under appropriate conditions, CsPbBr3 spontaneously forms atomic thick squares at around 150nm across the solution. Atomic level fine dust - quantum dots - are another form that can spontaneously form, but so far they have not provided sufficient gain for lasers.

Using micro imprinting lithography technology, waveguides were formed on a 20 x 20mm polyurethane acrylic substrate - a series of 20 μ M wide, 20 μ A long parallel channel with a depth of m, separated by 20 μ M thick wall.
These channels are filled with CsPbBr3 precursor solution and carefully wiped multiple times with a blade to evenly dose each channel.

The subsequent drying left a polycrystalline nanosheet at the bottom of each channel, which can be used for optical analysis - this is the expertise of the Busan Laboratory: the Department of Optoelectronics and Cogno Electromechanical Engineering.

"Perovskite nanosheets have properties that make them valuable for various applications," the university said. Their achievements have overcome the shortcomings of CsPbBr3 quantum dots, as their gain is essentially limited due to the short decay time of population inversion.

As part of the results, researchers created a new metric - "gain profile" - which describes the relationship between gain, spectral energy, and stripe length, and is "very convenient for analyzing local gain changes," according to the university.

The excitation and temperature dependence of the gain profile were measured, and the increase in gain and thermal stability of the polyurethane acrylate waveguide on the nanosheets was quantified.

"This enhancement is attributed to the improvement of optical constraints and heat dissipation, which is promoted by two-dimensional centroid constrained excitons and local states caused by uneven sheet thickness and defect states," said Pusan.

The collaboration between Busan National University and Oxford University in South Korea led to the publication of research results in the journal Optics: Science and Applications, titled "Enhancing perovskite nanosheets through patterned waveguides: excitation and temperature dependence of gain saturation.".

Source: Laser Net



İlgili öneriler
  • Tsinghua University makes progress in the field of pre sensing optical computing

    In the era of the Internet of Things, visual image sensors, as key devices in the intelligent society, are embedded in various devices such as mobile communication terminals, smart wearable devices, automobiles, and industrial machines. With the continuous expansion of applications, higher requirements have been put forward for the system power consumption, response speed, safety performance, and ...

    2024-08-05
    Çeviriyi gör
  • China University of Science and Technology has made progress in the study of the regulatory mechanism of thermally induced delayed fluorescence

    Recently, Professor Zhou Meng's research group at the University of Science and Technology of China collaborated with Professor Fu Hongbing's team at the Capital Normal University to reveal the mechanism by which aggregation effects regulate the luminescent properties of thermally delayed fluorescent materials. The research findings, titled "Aggregation Enhanced Thermally Activated Delayed Fluoros...

    2024-06-28
    Çeviriyi gör
  • Lidar: Entering the Golden Age of Fission Growth

    With the global transition of autonomous driving from L2 to L3+, in the battle between LiDAR and pure visual perception routes, LiDAR is redefining the industry landscape at an astonishing pace of technological evolution and quietly building a new industrial ecosystem in the era of intelligent travel. Before the end-to-end model of autonomous driving became mainstream, there were many discussion...

    03-21
    Çeviriyi gör
  • MKS Instruments will build a factory in Malaysia

    Recently, American semiconductor equipment manufacturer MKS Instruments announced plans to build a factory in Penang, Malaysia to support the production of wafer manufacturing equipment in the region and globally. This development plan will be divided into three stages to build a new factory, and it is expected to break ground and start construction in early 2025.Why choose to build a factory in M...

    2024-06-26
    Çeviriyi gör
  • Magdalena Ridge expands the capacity of optical interferometers

    The Magdalena Ridge Observatory has purchased a second-generation off-axis beam compressor from Optical Surface, which will expand the functionality of the facility's optical interferometer.Interferometer is a research tool that combines two or more light sources to create interference patterns that can be measured and analyzed. In astronomy, interferometers combine the light collected by multiple...

    2024-01-05
    Çeviriyi gör