Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Nuclear Energy News .




NANO TECH
Single nanomaterial yields many laser colors
by Staff Writers
Providence RI (SPX) May 02, 2012


Colloidal quantum dots - nanocrystals - can produce lasers of many colors. Cuong Dang manipulates a green beam that pumps the nanocrystals with energy, in this case producing red laser light. Credit: Mike Cohea/Brown University.

Red, green, and blue lasers have become small and cheap enough to find their way into products ranging from BluRay DVD players to fancy pens, but each color is made with different semiconductor materials and by elaborate crystal growth processes.

A new prototype technology demonstrates all three of those colors coming from one material. That could open the door to making products, such as high-performance digital displays, that employ a variety of laser colors all at once.

"Today in order to create a laser display with arbitrary colors, from white to shades of pink or teal, you'd need these three separate material systems to come together in the form of three distinct lasers that in no way shape or form would have anything in common," said Arto Nurmikko, professor of engineering at Brown University and senior author of a paper describing the innovation in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

"Now enter a class of materials called semiconductor quantum dots."

The materials in prototype lasers described in the paper are nanometer-sized semiconductor particles called colloidal quantum dots or nanocrystals with an inner core of cadmium and selenium alloy and a coating of zinc, cadmium, and sulfur alloy and a proprietary organic molecular glue.

Chemists at QD Vision of Lexington, Mass., synthesize the nanocrystals using a wet chemistry process that allows them to precisely vary the nanocrystal size by varying the production time.

Size is all that needs to change to produce different laser light colors: 4.2 nanometer cores produce red light, 3.2 nanometer ones emit green light and 2.5 nanometer ones shine blue. Different sizes would produce other colors along the spectrum.

The cladding and the nanocrystal structure are critical advances beyond previous attempts to make lasers with colloidal quantum dots, said lead author Cuong Dang, a senior research associate and nanophotonics laboratory manager in Nurmikko's group at Brown.

Because of their improved quantum mechanical and electrical performance, he said, the coated pyramids require 10 times less pulsed energy or 1,000 times less power to produce laser light than previous attempts at the technology.

Quantum nail polish
When chemists at QDVision brew a batch of colloidal quantum dots for Brown-designed specifications, Dang and Nurmikko get a vial of a viscous liquid that Nurmikko said somewhat resembles nail polish.

To make a laser, Dang coats a square of glass - or a variety of other shapes - with the liquid. When the liquid evaporates, what's left on the glass are several densely packed solid, highly ordered layers of the nanocrystals.

By sandwiching that glass between two specially prepared mirrors, Dang creates one of the most challenging laser structures, called a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser. The Brown-led team was the first to make a working VCSEL with colloidal quantum dots.

The nanocrystals' outer coating alloy of zinc, cadmium, sulfur and that molecular glue is important because it reduces an excited electronic state requirement for lasing and protects the nanocrystals from a kind of crosstalk that makes it hard to produce laser light, Nurmikko said.

Every batch of colloidal quantum dots has a few defective ones, but normally just a few are enough to interfere with light amplification.

Faced with a high excited electronic state requirement and destructive crosstalk in a densely packed layer, previous groups have needed to pump their dots with a lot of power to push them past a higher threshold for producing light amplification, a core element of any laser. Pumping them intensely, however, gives rise to another problem: an excess of excited electronic states called excitons.

When there are too many of these excitons among the quantum dots, energy that could be producing light is instead more likely to be lost as heat, mostly through a phenomenon known as the Auger process.

The nanocrystals' structure and outer cladding reduces destructive crosstalk and lowers the energy needed to get the quantum dots to shine. That reduces the energy required to pump the quantum dot laser and significantly reduces the likelihood of exceeding the level of excitons at which the Auger process drains energy away.

In addition, a benefit of the new approach's structure is that the dots can act more quickly, releasing light before Auger process can get started, even in the rare cases when it still does start.

"We have managed to show that it's possible to create not only light, but laser light," Nurmikko said. "In principle, we now have some benefits: using the same chemistry for all colors, producing lasers in a very inexpensive way, relatively speaking, and the ability to apply them to all kinds of surfaces regardless of shape. That makes possible all kinds of device configurations for the future."

In addition to Nurmikko and Dang, another author at Brown is Joonhee Lee. QD Vision authors include Craig Breen, Jonathan Steckel, and Seth Coe-Sullivan, a company co-founder who studied engineering at Brown as an undergraduate.

.


Related Links
Brown University
Nano Technology News From SpaceMart.com
Computer Chip Architecture, Technology and Manufacture






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








NANO TECH
Notre Dame paper examines nanotechnology-related safety and ethics problem
Notre Dame, IN (SPX) May 01, 2012
A recent paper by Kathleen Eggleson, a research scientist in the Center for Nano Science and Technology (NDnano) at the University of Notre Dame, provides an example of a nanotechnology-related safety and ethics problem that is unfolding right now. The world of nanotechnology, which involves science and engineering down at billionths-of-a-meter scales, might seem remote. But like most new ... read more


NANO TECH
Tests of aviation jet biofuel to start

High-Yield Method for Producing Everyday Plastics from Biomass

Oil palm surging source of greenhouse gas emissions

Climate change, biofuels mandate would cause corn price spikes

NANO TECH
Avidan Management Announces Solar Power Project in Edison New Jersey

Solar Array at Oberlin College

Panasonic Solar Panels Installed at New City Nissan in Honolulu

Folding light: Wrinkles and twists boost power from solar panels

NANO TECH
NASA Satellite Measurements Imply Texas Wind Farm Impact on Surface Temperature

Scientists find night-warming effect over large wind farms in Texas

DoD, Navy and Wind Farm Developer Release Historic MoA

British engineering firm creates 1,000 wind farm jobs

NANO TECH
Poll: Gov't needed for clean, green work

Alberta carbon capture project dropped

U.N. official: Energy access for all Asia

New monitoring system identifies carbon dioxide from fossil fuel burning

NANO TECH
UN gives Sudan, South Sudan 48 hours to halt hostilities

Japan buys stake in Australia LNG

Philippines asks US for radars, patrol boats and aircraft

Report: Poles to bid for Czech pipelines

NANO TECH
Three Earthlike planets identified by Cornell astronomers

Some Stars Capture Rogue Planets

ALMA Reveals Workings of Nearby Planetary System

UF-led team uses new observatory to characterize low-mass planets orbiting nearby star

NANO TECH
French firm eyes Brazil's naval expansion

China and Russia hold first navy exercises

Taiwan plans to buy four warships from US: report

DCNS, Brazil firm partner for submarines

NANO TECH
Opportunity's Eighth Anniversary View From Greeley Haven

Studies of 'Amboy' Rock Continue as Solar Energy Improves

New form of Mars lava flow dicovered

100 Days and Counting to NASA's Curiosity Mars Rover Landing




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement