18 - 22 August 2024
San Diego, California, US
Conference 13139 > Paper 13139-34
Paper 13139-34

Superfluorescence in microrods and microplates (Invited Paper)

19 August 2024 • 4:50 PM - 5:15 PM PDT | Conv. Ctr. Room 11B

Abstract

Superfluorescence (SF) is a unique optical phenomenon that consists of an ensemble of emitters coupling collectively to produce a short but extremely intense burst of light. Despite our recently published works showing that room temperature anti-Stokes shifted SF were achieved in a few randomly assembled or even single lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticle (UCNP), the coupling required to produce and optimize Burnham-Chiao ringing (echoing of pulses) is not understood. Such ringing could be particularly useful to provide timing and multiplexing in potential applications as an alternative light source device. We previously found a lack of Burnham Chiao ringing in single nanocrystals, but strong ringing in a random cluster. The ordered assembly of these crystals will not only create a SF superburst, but also enable understanding of the periodicity of the Burnham Chiao ringing. This work explores SF microrod (MR) and microplate (Mplate), with enhanced SF performance and the closely spaced assembly of MR/Mplate result in a greater active volume, which gives rise to greater Burnham-Chiao ringing.

Presenter

North Carolina State Univ. (United States)
Following completion of a Ph.D. at the University of Cambridge, UK, 2004, Shuang Fang Lim served in a postdoctoral Research Position at Princeton University from 2004-2008. She is the first to report on the observation of solid state anti-Stokes shifted room temperature superfluorescence (SF) in the smallest-ever observed SF media at the single nanocrystal-level. Prior to her findings, SF has only been realized in extreme conditions (at low temperatures of around 6 K), thus limiting the feasibility of its practical applications. Her research also showed that the nanocrystals can produce a pulse sequence with a fixed time interval, known as Burnham-Chiao ringing, indicating that they could potentially become quantum optical timers.
Application tracks: Sustainability
Presenter/Author
North Carolina State Univ. (United States)
Author
Rene Ganoe
North Carolina State Univ. (United States)
Author
Robert Riehn
North Carolina State Univ. (United States)
Author
Kai Huang
Univ. of Massachusetts Chan Medical School (United States)
Author
Gang Han
Univ. of Massachusetts Chan Medical School (United States)