Publication | Open Access
Interference-enhanced infrared-to-visible upconversion in solid-state thin films sensitized by colloidal nanocrystals
51
Citations
17
References
2017
Year
Optical MaterialsTypical Bilayer DeviceEngineeringColloidal NanocrystalsInterference-enhanced Infrared-to-visible UpconversionOptoelectronic DevicesChemistryLuminescence PropertySemiconductorsSolid-state Thin FilmsOptical PropertiesTriplet-triplet Exciton AnnihilationNanophotonicsMaterials ScienceInfrared PhotonsNanotechnologyPhotonic MaterialsOptoelectronic MaterialsUpconversion LuminescenceNanocrystalline MaterialNanomaterialsApplied PhysicsLight AbsorptionNanofabricationOptoelectronicsSolar Cell Materials
Infrared-to-visible photon upconversion has potential applications in photovoltaics, sensing, and bioimaging. We demonstrate a solid-state thin-film device that utilizes sensitized triplet-triplet exciton annihilation, converting infrared photons absorbed by colloidal lead sulfide nanocrystals (NCs) into visible photons emitted from a luminescent dopant in rubrene at low incident light intensities. A typical bilayer device consisting of a monolayer of NCs and a doped film of rubrene is limited by low infrared absorption in the thin NC film. Here, we augment the bilayer with an optical spacer layer and a silver-film back reflector, resulting in interference effects that enhance the optical field and thus the absorption in the NC film. The interference-enhanced device shows an order-of-magnitude increase in the upconverted emission at the wavelength of λ = 610 nm when excited at λ = 980 nm. At incident light intensities above 1.1 W/cm2, the device attains maximum efficiency, converting (1.6 ± 0.2)% of absorbed infrared photons into higher-energy singlet excitons in rubrene.
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