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The fabrication and lithography of conjugated polymer distributed feedback lasers and development of their applications

This thesis presents a study of lasing properties and optical amplification in semiconducting conjugated polymers and dendrimers. Configured as surface-emitting distributed feedback lasers, the effect of incorporating wavelength-scale microstructure on the output of the devices is examined along with the ability to create such structures using simplified fabrication processes such as soft lithography. Conjugated materials have received a great deal of interest due to their broad spectral absorption, emission, ability to exhibit gain and ease of processing from solution. As a result, they show great potential for a variety of applications such as photovoltaics, displays, amplifiers and lasers. To date however, there has only been one demonstration of a polymer optical amplifier. A broadband, solution based polymer amplifier is presented where the gain overlaps with the transmission window of polymer optical fibres. The effect of transitions that reduce the availability of gain in conjugated polymers is also examined by studying saturation of absorption in thin films. Producing wavelength scale microstructure is traditionally a slow, expensive technique. Here, solvent assisted micromoulding is used to pattern polymer films in less than two minutes. The effect of the variations in the pattern transfer on the laser characteristics is examined. The micromoulding technique is then applied to fabricating novel device types such as circular gratings and flexible plastic lasers. Encapsulation of the micromoulded laser is then shown to improve the lifetime of the device by over three orders of magnitude. The degradation effects witnessed during this extended operation are characterised quantitatively, an area of study where little data exists in the literature. A novel class of branched dendrimer materials whose properties can be independently tuned due to their modular architecture are configured as blue-emitting distributed feedback lasers. The ability to tune the emission wavelength by varying the film thickness is demonstrated. By changing the chemical groups contained within the molecule, further tuning of the emission can be obtained along with the demonstration of a highly efficient blue-emitting dendrimer laser. Chemosensing using dendrimer lasers is presented by demonstrating the incredibly sensitive response of the laser device to trace vapours of nitro-benzene compounds. The future application of which could be highly beneficial in the detection of explosives.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:552064
Date January 2007
CreatorsRichardson, Scott
ContributorsSamuel, Ifor D. W.; Turnbull, Graham A.
PublisherUniversity of St Andrews
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/10023/401

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