Abstract
The chemical synthesis of nanographene molecules constitutes the bottom-up approach toward graphene, simultaneously providing rational chemical design, structure-property control and exploitation of their semiconducting and luminescence properties. Here, we report nanographene-based lasers from three zigzag-edged polycyclic aromatics. The devices consist of a passive polymer film hosting the nanographenes and a top-layer polymeric distributed feedback resonator. Both the active material and the laser resonator are processed from solution, key for the purpose of obtaining low-cost devices with mechanical flexibility. The prepared lasers show narrow linewidth (< 0.13 nm) emission at different spectral regions covering a large segment of the visible spectrum, and up to the vicinity of the near-infrared. They show outstandingly long operational lifetimes (above 105 pump pulses) and very low thresholds. These results represent a significant step forward in the field of graphene and broaden its versatility in low-cost devices implying light emission, such as lasers.
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CITATION STYLE
Bonal, V., Muñoz-Mármol, R., Gordillo Gámez, F., Morales-Vidal, M., Villalvilla, J. M., Boj, P. G., … Díaz-García, M. A. (2019). Solution-processed nanographene distributed feedback lasers. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11336-0
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