Abstract

Tunability of fluorescence intensity is an essential parameter for enhancing the versatility of devices like emissive displays and solar cells. Soft photonic crystals, with their tunable photonic band gap (PBG), are highly sought-after systems for such purposes. Here, we report modulation of photoluminescence (PL) intensity in a fluorescent dye-doped blue phase liquid crystal, a 3D soft photonic crystal. On cooling, from the isotropic fluid phase, the PL intensity gets enhanced due to the overlapping of the emission wavelength of the dye with the photonic band edge. However, the PL intensity decreases on the application of an electric field, despite both thermal and electric fields having a similar effect (red shift) on the PBG. The contrasting behavior of PL intensity, also observed in composites obtained by varying the dye and the chiral dopant (handedness), is discussed in terms of scattering pathways for the emitted photons. The time-resolved PL studies show a reduction in the lifetime of the excited species upon cooling, validating the thermal dependence of PL intensity modulation due to Purcell effect. The facile modulation of PL intensity in the dye-doped blue phase system makes it appealing from the point of view of high-performance photonic applications.

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