Influence of gain material concentration on an organic DFB laser

Alexander Palatnik, Ora Bitton, Hagit Aviv, Yaakov Raphael Tischler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

In this work, we investigate the properties of an organic distributed feedback laser as the concentration of the gain material in the waveguide core is varied across two orders of magnitude, from 5% down to 0.025%. The laser dye DCJTB (4-(Dicyanomethylene)- 2-tert-butyl-6-(1,1,7,7-tetramethyljulolidin-9-enyl-vinyl)-4H-pyran) incorporated into a PVK (poly(9-vinylcarbazole)) host matrix provided the gain. The composite layer of PVK:DCJTB was spin-cast onto a silica grating with second order periodicity, and upon nanosecond optical excitation lasing was generated in the wavelength range of 600 nm. The threshold pulse energy for achieving lasing increased as the concentration of DCJTB was reduced, however the threshold excitation density quantified in terms of number of excited molecules per unit area remained nearly constant at 1.3x1013 molecules/cm2. In contrast, the relative slope efficiency for lasing decreased considerably as the gain concentration was reduced.We show that this effect can not be explained by a standard 4-level lasing model, but rather that it is due to optically induced charge separation for the DCJTB molecules situated in the PVK host matrix. Our findings suggest that fast charge separation and long back recombination times can be a significant factor in limiting further reduction of the gain concentration in organic DFB lasers.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2715-2724
Number of pages10
JournalOptical Materials Express
Volume6
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Optical Society of America.

Funding

We want to thank Dr. Basanth S. Kalanoor for helping with the experiment. We gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Israel Science Foundation (ISF 206738) for funding this research and the Israel National Nanotechnology Initiative for the spectral measurement equipment, made possible by a Focal Technology Area grant (FTA 458004).

FundersFunder number
National Nanotechnology InitiativeFTA 458004
Israel Science FoundationISF 206738

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