Abstract
Pulsed lasers operating in the mid-infrared (3-25 µm) are increasingly becoming the light source of choice for a wide range of industrial and scientific applications such as spectroscopy, biomedical research, sensing, imaging, and communication. Up to now, one of the factors limiting the mid-infrared pulsed lasers is the lack of optical switch with a capability of pulse generation, especially for those with wideband response. Here, a semiconductor material of bismuth oxyselenide (Bi2 O2 Se) with a facile processibility, constituting an ultrabroadband saturable absorber for the mid-infrared (actually from the near-infrared to mid-infrared: 0.8-5.0 µm) is exhibited. Significantly, it is found that the optical response is associated with a strong nonlinear character, showing picosecond response time and response amplitude up to ≈330.1% at 5.0 µm. Combined with facile processibility and low cost, these solution-processed Bi2 O2 Se materials may offer a scalable and printable mid-infrared optical switch to open up the long-sought parameter space which is crucial for the exploitation of compact and high-performance mid-infrared pulsed laser sources.
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