Ligand-Driven Wavelength-Tunable and Ultra-Broadband Infrared Luminescence in Single-Ion-Doped Transparent Hybrid Materials

Here, tuning of the optical properties of emission centers by tailoring the ligand fields is investigated. Experimentally, it is demonstrated that Ni2+ can act as a single emission species in multiple octahedral local environments. Nanocrystal‐embedded hybrid materials are employed as hosts in order...

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Published inAdvanced functional materials Vol. 19; no. 13; pp. 2081 - 2088
Main Authors Zhou, Shifeng, Jiang, Nan, Wu, Botao, Hao, Jianhua, Qiu, Jianrong
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Weinheim WILEY-VCH Verlag 10.07.2009
WILEY‐VCH Verlag
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Summary:Here, tuning of the optical properties of emission centers by tailoring the ligand fields is investigated. Experimentally, it is demonstrated that Ni2+ can act as a single emission species in multiple octahedral local environments. Nanocrystal‐embedded hybrid materials are employed as hosts in order to take advantage of their convenience in local environment design for practical applications. Novel composite gain materials with high transparence are successfully made, and show interesting wavelength‐tunable and ultra‐broadband infrared luminescence covering the whole near‐infrared region from 1 100 to 1 800 nm. The infrared luminescence peak positions can be finely tuned from 1 300 to 1 450 and to 1 570 nm, with the largest full width at half maximum being about 400 nm and covering the telecommunication bands at 1 200–1 500 nm. According to the results of characterization, the unusual luminescence, interestingly, originates from Ni2+ in nanocrystals and the doping efficiency of Ni2+ is surprisingly high. The results demonstrate that the method presented may be an effective way to fabricate multifunctional light sources with various fundamental multifunctional applications from efficient broadband optical amplifiers to bio‐imaging. By tailoring the local ligand field around the active centers, Ni2+ doped hybrid materials show ultra‐broadband infrared luminescence covering the whole near‐infrared region from 1 100 to 1 800 nm, with the largest full width at half maximum being about 400 nm. The luminescence wavelength can be finely tuned from 1 300 to 1 450 and to 1 570 nm.
Bibliography:Hong Kong Polytechnic University Research Grant - No. G-U349
istex:7E48E70307B3806063D9740C34598BB9E337D173
ark:/67375/WNG-Q0TNS52W-F
Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Teams in University - No. IRT0651
National Basic Research Program of China - No. 2006CB806000b
ArticleID:ADFM200800986
National Natural Science Foundation of China - No. 50872123; No. 50802083
NSF - No. DMR0603993
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:1616-301X
1616-3028
DOI:10.1002/adfm.200800986