Synthesis and solution-processing of specialized chemical compounds can facilitate the fabrication of nano-electronic devices. Many of these emerging applications require organic materials with well-characterized optical properties, specifically, large two-photon absorption (2PA) and nonlinear optical (NLO) responses. The most common strategy to achieve a strong second order nonlinear optical response is to link donor and acceptor moieties on opposite ends of a π-conjugated aromatic spacer. This configuration promotes spatial charge transfer and a strong difference in dipole moments between the ground and excited electronic states. Individual organic molecules, tailor made following this strategy, can often exhibit exceptionally large intrinsic nonlinear optical properties, but the translation to a macroscopic electro-optic activity is often extremely difficult. Roughly more than 80% of all π-conjugated organic molecules crystallize in centrosymmetric space groups producing materials with no second order bulk susceptibility. Our group has demonstrated that is possible overcome this restriction by embedding organic molecules, which normally crystallize in centrosymmetric structures, into nanostructured polymeric matrix. Recently, we observed greatly enhance the nonlinearities of nominally weak nonlinear materials when insert in a polymeric nanofibers, one-dimensional nanostructures. These types of nanostructures are attracting attention because of the unique optical interactions that arise from their sub wavelength size.
To explore this phenomena in detail we take advantage of our state of the art custom built Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscope (FLIM). The temporal resolution of the FLIM is about 25 picoseconds and less than a 1 micron of spatial resolution. This system allows us to monitor the effects of nano-structured environments and their localized optical response. Other systems of current interest in our research group are graphene quantum dots both in solution and dispersed in a thin film of PVA, the interaction of excited dye molecules with a single layer graphene surface and tailor designed molecules for two photon absorption in the near infrared portion of the spectrum.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio