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2D TiS 2 Layers: A Superior Nonlinear Optical Limiting Material
Author(s) -
Varma Sreekanth J.,
Kumar Jitesh,
Liu Yang,
Layne Katherine,
Wu Jingjie,
Liang Chenglu,
Nakanishi Yusuke,
Aliyan Amir,
Yang Wei,
Ajayan Pulickel M.,
Thomas Jayan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
advanced optical materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.89
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 2195-1071
DOI - 10.1002/adom.201700713
Subject(s) - materials science , graphene , optoelectronics , transmittance , nonlinear optics , optical power , limiter , laser , nonlinear optical , nanotechnology , optics , nonlinear system , physics , telecommunications , computer science , quantum mechanics
The advancement in high power lasers has urged the requisite of efficient optical limiting materials for both eye and sensor protection. The discovery of atomically thin 2D transition metal dichacogenides with distinctive properties has paved the way for a variety of applications including optical limiting. Until recently, the optical limiting effect exhibited by 2D materials is inferior to the benchmark materials fullerene (C 60 ) and graphene. This article reports the optical limiting activity of the 2D transition metal dichalcogenide, titanium disulfide (TiS 2 ) nanosheets, using optical and photoacoustic z‐scan techniques. The 77% nonlinear optical limiting exhibited by the TiS 2 sheets with 73% linear‐transmittance is superior to that of any other existing 2D dichalcogenide sheets, graphene, and the benchmark optical limiting material, C 60 . The enhanced nonlinear response is attributed to the concerted effect of 2‐photon and the induced excited state absorptions. By using photoacoustic z‐scan, a unique tool developed to determine the nonlinear optical limiting mechanism in materials, it is found that the optical limiting exhibited by TiS 2 2D sheets and graphene are mainly due to nonlinear absorption rather than scattering effects. These results have opened the door for 2D‐dichalcogenide‐materials‐based highly efficient optical limiters, especially at low fluences.

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