| Literature DB >> 28772869 |
Minghuan Liu1,2, Yonggang Liu3, Zenghui Peng4, Shaoxin Wang5, Qidong Wang6, Quanquan Mu7, Zhaoliang Cao8, Li Xuan9.
Abstract
Organic solid-state tri-wavelength lasing was demonstrated from dye-doped holographic polymer-dispersed liquid crystal (HPDLC) distributed feedback (DFB) laser with semiconducting polymer poly[-methoxy-5-(2'-ethyl-hexyloxy)-1,4-phenylene-vinylene] (MEH-PPV) and laser dye [4-(dicyanomethylene)-2-methyl-6-(p-dimethylaminostyryl)-4H-pyran] (DCM) by a one-step holography technique, which centered at 605.5 nm, 611.9 nm, and 671.1 nm. The temperature-dependence tuning range for the tri-wavelength dye-doped HPDLC DFB laser was as high as 8 nm. The lasing emission from the 9th order HPDLC DFB laser with MEH-PPV as active medium was also investigated, which showed excellent s-polarization characterization. The diffraction order is 9th and 8th for the dual-wavelength lasing with DCM as the active medium. The results of this work provide a method for constructing the compact and cost-effective all solid-state smart laser systems, which may find application in scientific and applied research where multi-wavelength radiation is required.Entities:
Keywords: diffraction order; distributed feedback; holographic polymer-dispersed liquid crystal; tri-wavelength lasing; tuning
Year: 2017 PMID: 28772869 PMCID: PMC5459077 DOI: 10.3390/ma10050509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1(a) Experimental schematic setup for holographic polymer-dispersed liquid crystal (HPDLC) and distributed feedback (DFB) film fabrication. (b) Schematic illustration of HPDLC DFB laser device structure and (c) an HPDLC DFB laser lasing characterization experimental diagram.
Figure 2Spectroscopic characterization, e.g., the absorbance and fluorescence spectra of the active medium MEH-PPV and DCM. The fluorescence spectrum was collected with continuous excitation at 500 and 480 nm for MEH-PPV and DCM, respectively.
Figure 3Lasing property of the 9th order HPDLC DFB laser. (a) Lasing spectra with the grating period selected at 1.72 μm and (b) the emission intensity as a function of the polarizer axis rotation angle.
Figure 4The emission pattern of the 9th order HPDLC DFB laser collected by a digital camera with the excitation energy at 20 μJ/pulse.
Figure 5Tri-wavelength lasing property for the dye-doped HPDLC DFB laser at 20 °C. (a) Tri-wavelength lasing spectra of the dye-doped holographic polymer-dispersed liquid crystal (HPDLC)-distributed feedback (DFB) laser. The grating period was 1.72 μm for the tri-wavelength lasing operation. (b) Dependence of output emission intensity to excitation energy for different wavelength.
Figure 6Tuning property for the tri-wavelength lasing HPDLC DFB laser by elevating temperature. (a) Dependence of the lasing spectra to operation temperature. (b) The working lasing threshold as a function of the operation temperature.