1. Study of laser actions by bird’s feathers with photonic crystals
- Author
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Matteo Chiesa, Po-Han Tung, Bing-Yi Hung, Jin-You Lu, Thomas C.-K. Yang, Shih-Wen Chen, and Ja-Hon Lin
- Subjects
Optics and Photonics ,Materials science ,Science ,Physics::Optics ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Light scattering ,Article ,law.invention ,Parrots ,law ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,Lasers, LEDs and light sources ,Animals ,Photonic crystal ,Laser material processing ,Multidisciplinary ,Structural properties ,business.industry ,Scattering ,Sustainable manufacturing ,Lasers ,Feathers ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Parrot feathers ,Laser ,0104 chemical sciences ,Lower threshold ,Feather ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Optoelectronics ,Medicine ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Crystallization - Abstract
Random lasers had been made by some biomaterials as light scattering materials, but natural photonic crystals have been rarely reported as scattering materials. Here we demonstrate the ability of natural photonic crystals to drive laser actions by sandwiched the feathers of the Turquoise-Fronted Amazon parrot and dye between two plastic films. Parrot feathers comprise abundant photonic crystals, and different color feathers compose of different ratios of the photonic crystal, which directly affect the feather reflectance. In this study, the multi-reflection scattering that occurred at the interface between the photonic crystal and gain media efficiently reduce the threshold; therefore, the more photonic crystal constitutes in the feathers; the lower threshold can be obtained. The random lasers can be easily made by the integration of bird feather photonic crystals and dye with a simple and sustainable manufacturing approach.
- Published
- 2021