Abstract Since their inception, quantum dots have proven to be advantageous for light management applications due to their high brightness and well‐controlled absorption, scattering, and emission properties. As quantum dots become commercially available at large scale, the need for robust, stable, and flexible optical components continues to drive the development of robust and flexible quantum dot composite materials. In this review, after a thorough introduction to quantum dots, discussion delves into methods for fabricating quantum dot loaded composite optical elements such as thin films, microfabricated patterns, and microstructures. The importance of surface chemistry and ligand engineering, host matrixes, wet processing, and unique patterning methodologies is presented by considering photostability, aggregation, and phase separation of quantum dots in corresponding composites. With regard to prospective optical applications of quantum dot materials, emphasis is placed on light emitting and guiding composite materials for lasing applications, specifically whispering gallery mode‐based photonic microsystems. These developments will enable novel flexible, portable, and miniaturized optoelectronic devices such as light‐emitting diodes, flexible pixelated displays, solar cells, large‐area microwaveguides, omnidirectional micromirrors, optical metasurfaces, and directional microlasers.
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A dual responsive photonic liquid for independent modulation of color brightness and hue
Responsive chromic materials are highly desirable in the fields of displays, anti-counterfeiting, and camouflage, but their advanced applications are usually limited by the unrealized delicate and independent tunability of their three intrinsic attributes of color. This work achieves the separate, continuous, and reversible modulation of structural color brightness and hue with an aqueous suspension of dual-responsive Fe 3 O 4 @polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP)@poly( N -isopropyl acrylamide) (PNIPAM) flexible photonic nanochains. The underlying modulation mechanism of color brightness was experimentally and numerically deciphered by analyzing the morphological responses to stimuli. When an increasing magnetic field was applied, the random worm-like flexible photonic nanochains gradually orientated along the field direction, due to the dominant magnetic dipole interaction over the thermal motion, lengthening the orientation segment length up to the whole of the nanochains. Consequently, the suspension displays increased color brightness (characterized by diffraction intensity). Meanwhile, the color hue (characterized by diffraction frequency) could be controlled by temperature, due to the volume changes of the interparticle PNIPAM. The achieved diverse color modulation advances the next-generation responsive chromic materials and enriches the basic understanding of the color tuning mechanisms. With versatile and facile color tunability and shape patterning, the developed responsive chromic liquid promises to have attractive potential in full-color displays and in adaptive camouflages.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1810485
- PAR ID:
- 10282417
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Materials Horizons
- Volume:
- 8
- Issue:
- 7
- ISSN:
- 2051-6347
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 2032 to 2040
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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