Abstract
Broadband near-infrared (NIR) photonic materials have wide applications. Although extensive studies on rare-earth, transition-metal, and even semiconductor-activated materials have enabled the development of a rich NIR material pool, developing broadband and efficient photonic candidates covering the NIR I and II regions from 750 to 1500nm has been met with limited success. Here, it is reported that a subnano Te cluster with a characteristic configuration different from that of the ion state may fill the aforementioned gap. Further, a strategy is proposed for the in situ generation and stabilization of Te clusters by tuning the cluster evolution in glass. A novel active photonic glass embedded with a Te cluster is fabricated; it exhibits intense and broadband short-wave NIR luminescence with a central wavelength at 1030nm and a bandwidth exceeding 330nm. Interestingly, the glass exhibited a full visible-spectrum conversion ability from 300 to 800nm. The application of this unique broadband excitation feature for night vision and tissue penetration is demonstrated using a smartphone as the excitation source. These findings demonstrate a fundamental principle of cluster design in glass for creating new properties and provide a new direction for developing novel cluster-derived functional composite materials.
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