Abstract

Near-infrared luminescent rare-earth organic complexes have attracted intensive attention in the field of optical waveguide amplification. However, their optical gains were commonly less than 4 dB/cm due to limited doping concentrations. Herein, two one-dimensional (1D) Nd3+ coordination chains, namely, [Nd(TTA)3(DBTDPO)]n (Nd1) and [Nd(TTA)3(DPEPO)]n (Nd2), bridged by phosphine oxide ligands were developed for the neodymium-doped waveguide amplifier. Despite its P-P distance being similar to DBTDPO, the different P═O orientation of DPEPO renders markedly shorter intra- and interchain Nd-Nd distances for Nd2 in comparison to Nd1. Furthermore, the weaker intermolecular interactions alleviate the quenching effect for Nd2. Therefore, Nd2 can provide more locally concentrated and radiative Nd3+ ions, leading to a larger Nd3+-characteristic 1.06 μm emission intensity and duration than Nd1. Based on embedded and evanescent-field waveguide structures, Nd2 achieves state-of-the-art gain maxima of 5.7 and 4.9 dB/cm as well as outstanding gain stability. These results indicate that controllable coordination assembly of lanthanide ions in multidimension provides a flexible approach to combine local high-density outputs and effective suppression of quenching.

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