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Concomitant amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) and Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) are investigated in electrospun light-emitting fibers. Upon dye-doping with a proper FRET couple system, free-standing fibrous mats exhibit tunable FRET efficiency and, more importantly, tailorable threshold conditions for stimulated emission. In addition, effective scattering of light is found in the fibrous material by measuring the transport mean free path of photons by coherent backscattering experiments. The interplay of ASE and FRET leads to high control in designing optical properties from electrospun fibers, including the occurrence of simultaneous stimulated emission from both donor and acceptor components. All tunable-optical properties are highly interesting in view of applying electrospun light-emitting materials in lightening, display, and sensing technologies.
We present stacked organic lasing heterostructures made by different species of light-emitting electrospun fibers, each able to provide optical gain in a specific spectral region. A hierarchical architecture is obtained by conformable layers of fiber
Nanomaterials made of active fibers have the potential to become new functional components of light-emitting sources in the visible and near-IR range, lasers, and electronic devices
We report high time-resolution measurements of photon statistics from pairs of dye molecules coupled by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). In addition to quantum-optical photon antibunching, we observe photon bunching on a timescale of se
Motivated by recent experiments on photon statistics from individual dye pairs planted on biomolecules and coupled by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), we show here that the FRET dynamics can be modelled by Gaussian random processes with
The simultaneous vertical-cavity and random lasing emission properties of a blue-emitting molecular crystal are investigated. The 1,1,4,4-tetraphenyl-1,3-butadiene samples, grown by physical vapour transport, feature room-temperature stimulated emiss