Bulletin of the American Physical Society
85th Annual Meeting of the APS Southeastern Section
Volume 63, Number 19
Thursday–Saturday, November 8–10, 2018; Holiday Inn at World’s Fair Park, Knoxville, Tennessee
Session B04: Applied Physics I
11:00 AM–12:36 PM,
Thursday, November 8, 2018
Holiday Inn Knoxville Downtown
Room: Parlor
Chair: Ekaterina Paerschke
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.SES.B04.8
Abstract: B04.00008 : Broadband saturable absorption properties of 2D Ti2C MXene and its application in ultrafast fiber laser generation
12:24 PM–12:36 PM
Presenter:
Jun Yi
(Clemson University, Hunan University)
Authors:
Jun Yi
(Clemson University, Hunan University)
Lin Du
(Hunan University)
Jie Li
(Hunan University)
Sergii Chertopalov
(Missouri University of Science and Technology)
Longyu Hu
(Clemson University)
Chujun Zhao
(Hunan University)
Shuangchun Wen
(Hunan University)
Vadym N Mochalin
(Missouri University of Science and Technology)
Ramakrishna Podila
(Clemson University)
Apparao M Rao
(Clemson University)
Two-dimension (2D) materials, such as graphene, black phosphorus (BP) and transition metal dichalcogenides, have attracted much attention in the field of ultrafast fiber lasers due to their unique nonlinear optical (NLO) properties. However, due to the limitation of their intrinsic NLO properties, there is a growing need for novel broadband nonlinear materials in the near-infrared and mid-IR regimes. In this regard, MXene is a promising material due to its outstanding nonlinear properties. Here, we investigated the broadband nonlinear optical properties of 2D Ti2CTx MXene, where Tx represents functional groups such as -OH and -F. Using open aperture Z-scan method, we explored the broadband saturable absorption properties in the range 800 - 1560 nm. The large nonlinear absorption coefficient and low saturable intensity of Ti2CTx confirmed its potential use in NLO applications. Using Ti2CTx as saturable absorbers, we also developed ultrafast mode-locked fiber lasers operating at 1565 nm and 1051 nm with a pulse width of 5.3 ps and 164 ps, respectively. Lastly, we developed Ti2CTx-based passively Q-switched lasers that operated in mid-infrared regime at 2.8 um.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.SES.B04.8
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