Chemically derived graphene oxide (GO) is an atomically thin sheet of graphite that has traditionally served as a precursor for graphene, but is increasingly attracting chemists for its own characteristics. It is covalently decorated with oxygen-containing functional groups - either on the basal plane or at the edges - so that it contains a mixture of sp(2)- and sp(3)-hybridized carbon atoms. In particular, manipulation of the size, shape and relative fraction of the sp(2)-hybridized domains of GO by reduction chemistry provides opportunities for tailoring its optoelectronic properties. For example, as-synthesized GO is insulating but controlled deoxidation leads to an electrically and optically active material that is transparent and conducting. Furthermore, in contrast to pure graphene, GO is fluorescent over a broad range of wavelengths, owing to its heterogeneous electronic structure. In this Review, we highlight the recent advances in optical properties of chemically derived GO, as well as new physical and biological applications.
The optical conductance of monolayer graphene is defined solely by the fine structure constant, α = e 2 /ћc (where e is the electron charge, ћ is Dirac's constant and c is the speed of light). The absorbance has been predicted to be independent of frequency. In principle, the interband optical absorption in zero-gap graphene could be saturated readily under strong excitation due to Pauli blocking. Here, we demonstrate the use of atomic layer graphene as saturable absorber in a mode-locked fiber laser for the generation of ultrashort soliton pulses (756 fs) at the telecommunication band. The modulation depth can be tuned in a wide range from 66.5% to 6.2% by varying the thickness of graphene. Our results suggest that ultrathin graphene films are potentially useful as optical elements in fiber lasers. Graphene as a laser mode locker can have many merits such as lower saturation intensity, ultrafast recovery time, tunable modulation depth and wideband tuneability.
Graphene has been hailed as a wonderful material in electronics, and recently, it is the rising star in photonics, as well. The wonderful optical properties of graphene afford multiple functions of signal emitting, transmitting, modulating, and detection to be realized in one material. In this paper, the latest progress in graphene photonics, plasmonics, and broadband optoelectronic devices is reviewed. Particular emphasis is placed on the ability to integrate graphene photonics onto the silicon platform to afford broadband operation in light routing and amplification, which involves components like polarizer, modulator, and photodetector. Other functions like saturable absorber and optical limiter are also reviewed.
Metal-halide perovskites have rapidly
emerged as one of the most
promising materials of the 21st century, with many exciting properties
and great potential for a broad range of applications, from photovoltaics
to optoelectronics and photocatalysis. The ease with which metal-halide
perovskites can be synthesized in the form of brightly luminescent
colloidal nanocrystals, as well as their tunable and intriguing optical
and electronic properties, has attracted researchers from different
disciplines of science and technology. In the last few years, there
has been a significant progress in the shape-controlled synthesis
of perovskite nanocrystals and understanding of their properties and
applications. In this comprehensive review, researchers having expertise
in different fields (chemistry, physics, and device engineering) of
metal-halide perovskite nanocrystals have joined together to provide
a state of the art overview and future prospects of metal-halide perovskite
nanocrystal research.
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