Organic solids and polymers that absorb in the near-infrared (NIR) region (1000-2000 nm) represent a class of emerging materials and show a great potential for use in photonics and telecommunications. The radical anions of stacked aromatic imides, fused phorphyrin arrays, polythiophenes, sandwich-type lanthanide bisphthalocyanines, semiquinones, and mixed-valence dinuclear metal complexes are a few known examples of NIR-absorbing organic materials. Most of these NIR-absorbing materials are also electrochemically active or electrochromic (EC). This brief review covers several types of NIR-absorbing organic materials and discusses their potentials for applications in EC variable optical attenuators (VOAs).
CITATION STYLE
Wang, Z. Y., Zhang, J., Wu, X., Birau, M., Yu, G., Yu, H., … LeClair, G. (2004). Near-infrared absorbing organic materials. In Pure and Applied Chemistry (Vol. 76, pp. 1435–1443). Walter de Gruyter GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1351/pac200476071435
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