Abstract

Nanostructured nonlinear optical (NLO) materials are attracting increasing interest as optical limiters for various applications. In this study, one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 was synthesized by a typical hydrothermal method and systematically characterized. The results showed that one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 has good crystallinity and thermal stability. Its morphology can be easily controlled to form nanotubes, nanobelts and nanorods by altering the amounts of added NaOH. The robustness of the NLO properties of one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 in broadband optical limiting (OL) applications was investigated by the open-aperture Z-scan method. At laser wavelengths of 532 nm and 1064 nm, the effective nonlinear extinction coefficients showed nonmonotonic dependence on the morphology; nanotubes gave the maximum value. The results confirmed that the NLO and OL responses of one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 can be effectively optimized by tailoring the morphology. In addition, the nonlinear extinction coefficients of these three types of one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 are better than those of multi-walled carbon nanotubes, a benchmark one-dimensional OL material, at 532 nm and 1064 nm; they therefore have potential applications in nonlinear optics. Nonlinear scattering and photothermal effect measurements showed that the OL shown by one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 can be mainly attributed to nonlinear scattering and free-carrier absorption at both irradiation wavelengths. The fabrication of one-dimensional nanostructured Na2Ti3O7 with different morphologies via this simple approach paves the way for the synthesis and tuning of new one-dimensional materials with desirable photonic properties for various applications.

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