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Unveiling the dimension-dependence of femtosecond nonlinear optical properties of tellurium nanostructures.

Qi XiaoBo MaXian FeiDuan-Wu LiuXin-Ping ZhaiXiang-Yang LiMing-Jun XiaoYong PengQiang WangHao-Li Zhang
Published in: Nanoscale horizons (2021)
Low dimensional tellurium is currently of great interest for potential electronic applications due to the experimentally observed Weyl fermions and the excellent carrier mobility, on/off ratios and current-carrying capacity in devices. However, the optical properties of Te nanostructures are not well explored, especially in the field of nonlinear optics. Here, we prepared a series of Te nanostructures by electrochemical exfoliation and liquid phase exfoliation methods, including one-dimensional (1D) Te nanowires (NWs), quasi-1D Te nanorods (NRs), zero-dimensional (0D) Te nanodots (NDs) and two-dimensional (2D) Te nanosheets (NSs). Femtosecond Z-scan measurements reveal unique dimension-dependent nonlinear optical (NLO) properties. 1D Te NWs and quasi-1D Te NRs exhibited higher saturable absorption behavior than 0D Te nanostructures, while the 2D Te NSs are a high performance optical limiting material. Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy revealed the dimension-dependent exciton dynamics. The reverse saturable absorption of 2D Te NSs is derived from faster exciton relaxation and stronger excited state absorption. This work paves the way for the design of saturable absorbers with high performance and broadens the application of 2D Te in the field of laser protection and other novel ultrafast photonics.
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