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Flexible and Micropatternable Triplet–Triplet Annihilation Upconversion Thin Films for Photonic Device Integration and Anticounterfeiting Applications
60
Citations
53
References
2018
Year
Optical MaterialsTriplet-triplet Annihilation UpconversionEngineeringDevice IntegrationOrganic Solar CellOptoelectronic DevicesIntegrated CircuitsPolymersElectronic DevicesAnticounterfeiting ApplicationsLow-energy PhotonsPhotonic Integrated CircuitPhotopolymer NetworkPolymer ChemistryNanophotonicsMaterials SciencePhotonicsPhotonic MaterialsPhotonic DeviceFilm ArchitecturesSemiconducting PolymerFlexible ElectronicsPolymer ScienceApplied PhysicsConjugated PolymerThin FilmsOptoelectronicsPhotonic Device IntegrationOrganic-inorganic Hybrid Material
Triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion (TTA-UC) has recently drawn widespread interest for its capacity to harvest low-energy photons and to broaden the absorption spectra of photonic devices, such as solar cells. Although conceptually promising, effective integration of TTA-UC materials into practical devices has been difficult due to the diffusive and anoxic conditions required in TTA-UC host media. Of the solid-state host materials investigated, rubbery polymers facilitate the highest TTA-UC efficiency. To date, however, their need for long-term oxygen protection has limited rubbery polymers to rigid film architectures that forfeit their intrinsic flexibility. This study introduces a new multilayer thin-film architecture, in which scalable solution processing techniques are employed to fabricate flexible, photostable, and efficient TTA-UC thin films containing layers of oxygen barrier and host polymers. This breakthrough material design marks a crucial advance toward TTA-UC integration within rigid and flexible devices alike. Moreover, it introduces new opportunities in unexplored applications such as anticounterfeiting. Soft lithography is incorporated into the film fabrication process to pattern TTA-UC host layers with a broad range of high-resolution microscale designs, and superimposing host layers with customized absorption, emission, and patterning ultimately produces proof-of-concept anticounterfeiting labels with advanced excitation-dependent photoluminescent security features.
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