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Low Threshold Organic Semiconductor Lasers : Hybrid Optoelectronics and Applications as Explosive Sensors / by Yue Wang.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Springer Theses, Recognizing Outstanding Ph.D. ResearchEditor: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014Descripción: xvI, 164 páginas 137 ilustraciones, 73 ilustraciones en color. recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9783319012674
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • TA1671-1707
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Introduction -- Theory of organic semiconductor lasers -- Experimental methods -- Low-threshold and broadly tuneable organic lasers based on star-shaped oligofluorene truxenes -- Commercial LED pumped organic semiconductor lasers -- Low threshold nanoimprinted organic lasers integration with micro-LED arrays -- Polymer with intrinsic microporosity used as explosive vapour sensors -- Towards ultra-portable hybrid organic/inorganic explosives sensing devices -- Conclusions and future work.
Resumen: This thesis focuses on two areas - the development of miniature plastic lasers that can be powered by LEDs, and the application of these lasers as highly sensitive sensors for vapours of nitroaromatic explosives (e.g. TNT). Polymer lasers are extremely compact visible lasers; the research described in the thesis is groundbreaking, driving forward the technology and physical understanding to allow these lasers to be routinely pumped by a single high-power LED. A notable advance in the work is the demonstration of nanoimprinted polymer lasers, which exhibit the world's lowest pump threshold densities by two orders of magnitude. The thesis also advances the application of these compact, novel lasers as highly sensitive detectors of explosive vapours, demonstrating that rapid detection can be achieved when microporous polymers are used. This work also demonstrates a prototype CMOS-based microsystem sensor for explosive vapours, exploiting a new detection approach.
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Springer eBooks

Introduction -- Theory of organic semiconductor lasers -- Experimental methods -- Low-threshold and broadly tuneable organic lasers based on star-shaped oligofluorene truxenes -- Commercial LED pumped organic semiconductor lasers -- Low threshold nanoimprinted organic lasers integration with micro-LED arrays -- Polymer with intrinsic microporosity used as explosive vapour sensors -- Towards ultra-portable hybrid organic/inorganic explosives sensing devices -- Conclusions and future work.

This thesis focuses on two areas - the development of miniature plastic lasers that can be powered by LEDs, and the application of these lasers as highly sensitive sensors for vapours of nitroaromatic explosives (e.g. TNT). Polymer lasers are extremely compact visible lasers; the research described in the thesis is groundbreaking, driving forward the technology and physical understanding to allow these lasers to be routinely pumped by a single high-power LED. A notable advance in the work is the demonstration of nanoimprinted polymer lasers, which exhibit the world's lowest pump threshold densities by two orders of magnitude. The thesis also advances the application of these compact, novel lasers as highly sensitive detectors of explosive vapours, demonstrating that rapid detection can be achieved when microporous polymers are used. This work also demonstrates a prototype CMOS-based microsystem sensor for explosive vapours, exploiting a new detection approach.

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