209 research outputs found
Amplified spontaneous emission and efficient tunable laser emission from a substituted thiophene-based oligomer
We investigated gain and lasing in spin-coated films of a soluble substituted oligothiophene. With increasing excitation power, the photoluminescence spectra show a clear line narrowing due to amplified spontaneous emission. We measure a low threshold (20 μJ cm−2) for line narrowing and a large gain cross section (6×10−16 cm2), indicating that this molecule is a promising active material for organic solid-state lasers. As a demonstrator, we realize a transverse electromagnetic (TEM00) single-mode laser with tunable emission from the yellow to the red (a range of 37 nm), with a pump threshold as low as 18 μJ cm−2 and efficiency of 1.9%. These results are among the best so far reported for organic lasers
Mode-matching in multiresonant plasmonic nanoantennas for enhanced second harmonic generation
Boosting nonlinear frequency conversion in extremely confined volumes remains
a key challenge in nano-optics, nanomedicine, photocatalysis, and
background-free biosensing. To this aim, field enhancements in plasmonic
nanostructures are often exploited to effectively compensate for the lack of
phase-matching at the nanoscale. Second harmonic generation (SHG) is, however,
strongly quenched by the high degree of symmetry in plasmonic materials at the
atomic scale and in nanoantenna designs. Here, we devise a plasmonic
nanoantenna lacking axial symmetry, which exhibits spatial and frequency mode
overlap at both the excitation and the SHG wavelengths. The effective
combination of these features in a single device allows obtaining unprecedented
SHG conversion efficiency. Our results shed new light on the optimization of
SHG at the nanoscale, paving the way to new classes of nanoscale coherent light
sources and molecular sensing devices based on nonlinear plasmonic platforms.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Nano-engineered electron–hole exchange interaction controls exciton dynamics in core–shell semiconductor nanocrystals
A strong electron–hole exchange interaction (EI) in semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) gives rise to a large (up to tens of meV) splitting between optically active ('bright') and optically passive ('dark') excitons. This dark–bright splitting has a significant effect on the optical properties of band-edge excitons and leads to a pronounced temperature and magnetic field dependence of radiative decay. Here we demonstrate a nanoengineering-based approach that provides control over EI while maintaining nearly constant emission energy. We show that the dark–bright splitting can be widely tuned by controlling the electron–hole spatial overlap in core–shell CdSe/CdS NCs with a variable shell width. In thick-shell samples, the EI energy reduces to <250 μeV, which yields a material that emits with a nearly constant rate over temperatures from 1.5 to 300 K and magnetic fields up to 7 T. The EI-manipulation strategies demonstrated here are general and can be applied to other nanostructures with variable electron–hole overlap
Novel hybrid organic/inorganic 2D quasiperiodic PC: from diffraction pattern to vertical light extraction
Recently, important efforts have been dedicated to the realization of a fascinating class of new photonic materials or metamaterials, known as photonic quasicrystals (PQCs), in which the lack of the translational symmetry is compensated by rotational symmetries not achievable by the conventional periodic crystals. As ever, more advanced functionality is demanded and one strategy is the introduction of non-linear and/or active functionality in photonic materials. In this view, core/shell nanorods (NRs) are a promising active material for light-emitting applications. In this article a two-dimensional (2D) hybrid a 2D octagonal PQC which consists of air rods in an organic/inorganic nanocomposite is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The nanocomposite was prepared by incorporating CdSe/CdS core/shell NRs into a polymer matrix. The PQC was realized by electron beam lithography (EBL) technique. Scanning electron microscopy, far field diffraction and spectra measurements are used to characterize the experimental structure. The vertical extraction of the light, by the coupling of the modes guided by the PQC slab to the free radiation via Bragg scattering, consists of a narrow red emissions band at 690 nm with a full width at half-maximum (FWHM) of 21.5 nm. The original characteristics of hybrid materials based on polymers and colloidal NRs, able to combine the unique optical properties of the inorganic moiety with the processability of the host matrix, are extremely appealing in view of their technological impact on the development of new high performing optical devices such as organic light-emitting diodes, ultra-low threshold lasers, and non-linear devices
Plan de mejora para la disminución de la rotación en Movich corporativo
En este proyecto de grado tiene como fin encontrar un plan de mejora para la disminución de la rotación en empresas del sector hotelero, para mejorar la productividad de los compañeros, motivándolos de manera extrínseca o intrínseca, dentro de dicho documento estará el software E-Learning para capacitar a los empleados y de esta manera, que pueda ejercer un plan de carrera al interior de la organización, motivación por medio de las distintas alianzas generadas, todo esto para que los empleados encuentren un clima laboral afable a sus necesidades.In this degree project aims to find an improvement plan for the decrease of rotation in companies in the hotel sector, to improve the productivity of peers, motivating them in an extrinsic or intrinsic way, within said document will be the E-Learning software to train employees and in this way, that can exercise a career plan within the organization, motivation through the various alliances generated, all this so that employees find a working environment friendly to their needs.Administrador (a) de EmpresasPregrad
Nd:YVO4 laser mode locked by cascading of second order nonlinearities
We present a comprehensive theoretical and experimental study on a new passive mode-locking technique, called cascaded second-order nonlinearity mode locking (CSM), which exploits cascaded second-order nonlinearities to obtain large third-order susceptibilities from an intracavity second harmonic crystal, The nonlinear phase shift that originates in the nonlinear crystal is converted into a nonlinear amplitude modulation by a suitable intracavity aperture, A numerical model, based on a perturbative approach, allows to calculate the nonlinear loss modulation of resonators used for CSM as a function of the resonator parameters and of the phase mismatch, The predictions of the model are confirmed by experiments performed on a CW Nd:YAG laser. The effects of group velocity mismatch and the limitations which it poses on the minimum achievable pulsewidth are analyzed both experimentally and theoretically
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