1 research outputs found
Nanoparticle-doped electrospun fiber random lasers with spatially extended light modes
Complex assemblies of light-emitting polymer nanofibers with molecular
materials exhibiting optical gain can lead to important advance to amorphous
photonics and to random laser science and devices. In disordered mats of
nanofibers, multiple scattering and waveguiding might interplay to determine
localization or spreading of optical modes as well as correlation effects. Here
we study electrospun fibers embedding a lasing fluorene-carbazole-fluorene
molecule and doped with titania nanoparticles, which exhibit random lasing with
sub-nm spectral width and threshold of about 9 mJ cm^-2 for the absorbed
excitation fluence. We focus on the spatial and spectral behavior of optical
modes in the disordered and non-woven networks, finding evidence for the
presence of modes with very large spatial extent, up to the 100
micrometer-scale. These findings suggest emission coupling into integrated
nanofiber transmission channels as effective mechanism for enhancing spectral
selectivity in random lasers and correlations of light modes in the complex and
disordered material.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure