Search results for "Colloidal quantum dots"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Single-Exciton Amplified Spontaneous Emission in Thin Films of CsPbX3 (X = Br, I) Perovskite Nanocrystals

2019

CsPbX3 perovskite nanocrystals (PNCs) have emerged as an excellent material for stimulated emission purposes, with even more prospective applications than conventional colloidal quantum dots. However, a better understanding of the physical mechanisms responsible for amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) is required to achieve more ambitious targets (lasing under continuous wave optical or electrical excitation). Here, we establish the intrinsic mechanisms underlying ASE in PNCs of three different band gaps (CsPbBr3, CsPbBr1.5I1.5, and CsPbI3). Our characterization at cryogenic temperatures does not reveal any evidence of the biexciton mechanism in the formation of ASE. Instead, the measured …

Amplified spontaneous emissionMaterials sciencebusiness.industryExciton02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesperovskite solar cells0104 chemical sciencesNanocrystalnanocrystalsthin filmsOptoelectronicsGeneral Materials ScienceColloidal quantum dotsStimulated emissionPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryThin film0210 nano-technologybusinessperovskitePerovskite (structure)
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Continuous Broadband MWP True-Time Delay with PbS-PMMA and -SU8 waveguides

2016

[EN] A new microwave true-time delay (TTD) photonic unit based on the dispersion of PbS colloidal quantum dots (QDs) in a Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) and the SU8 photoresist is presented. With this aim, the PbS-PMMA and PbS-SU8 nanocomposites are integrated on a silicon platform in the form of a planar and ridge waveguides, respectively. When PbS QDs on those structures are pumped below their band-gap, a phase shift and a temporal delay in an optically conveyed (at 1550 nm) microwave signal is performed. The results of these devices show potential benefits over current TTD technologies, since the proposed photonic waveguide structures allows real-time adjustment of the temporal delay by …

Materials scienceOptical fiber02 engineering and technologyOptical signal processingIntegrated microwave photonics7. Clean energySignalOptical waveguide componentsÒptica quànticalaw.inventionNanocompositesOptical pumping020210 optoelectronics & photonicsOpticslawDispersion (optics)TEORIA DE LA SEÑAL Y COMUNICACIONES0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringColloidal quantum dots (QDs)Electrical and Electronic EngineeringNanotecnologiabusiness.industryTrue time delayAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsOptical delay linesSemiconductorsOptoelectronicsPhotonicsbusinessWaveguideMicrowave
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Temperature Sensor Based on Colloidal Quantum Dots PMMA Nanocomposite Waveguides

2012

In this paper, integrated temperature sensors based on active nanocomposite planar waveguides are presented. The nanocomposites consist of cadmium selenide (CdSe) and cadmium telluride (CdTe) quantum dots (QDs) embedded in a polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) matrix. When the samples are heated in a temperature range from 25$^{circ}{rm C}$ to 50 $^{circ}{rm C}$, the waveguided photoluminescence of QDs suffers from a strong intensity decrease, which is approximately quadratic dependent on temperature. Moreover, the wavelength peak of the waveguided emission spectrum of CdTe-PMMA shows a blue shift of 0.25 ${rm nm}/^{circ}{rm C}$, whereas it remains constant in the case of CdSe-PMMA. A temperature…

Materials sciencePhotoluminescencePhysics::Medical PhysicsPhysics::OpticsNanocompositesCondensed Matter::Materials Sciencechemistry.chemical_compoundTEORIA DE LA SEÑAL Y COMUNICACIONESColloidal quantum dots (QDs)Temperature sensorsEmission spectrumElectrical and Electronic EngineeringInstrumentationPolymethylmethacrylate (PMMA)Cadmium selenideCondensed Matter::Otherbusiness.industryQuantum dotsAtmospheric temperature rangeCondensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall EffectCadmium telluride photovoltaicsBlueshiftOptical waveguideschemistryQuantum dotTemperature dependenceOptoelectronicsbusinessIntensity (heat transfer)
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Color Tuning and White Light by Dispersing CdSe, CdTe, and CdS in PMMA Nanocomposite Waveguides

2013

In this paper, active nanocomposite waveguides based on the dispersion of CdS, CdTe, and CdSe colloidal quantum dots (QDs) in PMMA are proposed. Their propagation properties are studied as a function of the concentration of nanoparticles in the polymer using the variable length stripe method. When the three nanostructures are dispersed in the same film, the structure is able to waveguide the three basic colors: red (CdSe), green (CdTe), and blue (CdS), it being possible to engineer any waveguided color by an appropriate choice of the filling factor of each QD in the PMMA matrix. For this purpose, it is important to take into account reabsorption effects and the Förster energy transfe…

Photonic materialslcsh:Applied optics. PhotonicsNanostructureNanocompositeMaterials sciencebusiness.industryNanoparticledisplay materialslcsh:TA1501-1820Nanotechnologyoptical waveguidesWaveguide (optics)Atomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsCadmium telluride photovoltaicsQuantum dotDispersion (optics)Optoelectronicscolloidal quantum dots (QDs)lcsh:QC350-467Electrical and Electronic EngineeringbusinessAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)lcsh:Optics. LightIEEE Photonics Journal
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Nonlinear Optical Characterization of InP@ZnS Core-Shell Colloidal Quantum Dots Using 532 nm, 10 ns Pulses

2021

InP@ZnS core-shell colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) were synthesized and characterized using the z-scan technique. The nonlinear refraction and nonlinear absorption coefficients (γ = −2 × 10−12 cm2 W−1, β = 4 × 10−8 cm W−1) of these CQDs were determined using 10 ns, 532 nm pulses. The saturable absorption (β = −1.4 × 10−9 cm W−1, Isat = 3.7 × 108 W cm−2) in the 3.5 nm CQDs dominated at small intensities of the probe pulses (I ≤ 7 × 107 W cm−2) followed by reverse saturable absorption at higher laser intensities. We report the optical limiting studies using these CQDs showing the suppression of propagated nanosecond radiation in the intensity range of 8 × 107–2 × 109 W cm−2. The role of nonline…

Range (particle radiation)Materials sciencesaturable absorptionGeneral Chemical EngineeringSaturable absorptionRadiationNanosecondLaserMolecular physicsArticlecore-shell colloidal quantum dotslaw.inventionCharacterization (materials science)ChemistryInP@ZnSlawTheoryofComputation_ANALYSISOFALGORITHMSANDPROBLEMCOMPLEXITYThermalnonlinear refractionGeneral Materials ScienceColloidal quantum dotsnonlinear absorptionQD1-999Nanomaterials
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