Abstract

Photothermal energy conversion is of fundamental importance to applications ranging from drug delivery to microfluidics and from ablation to fabrication. It typically originates from absorptive processes in materials that-when coupled with non-radiative dissipative processes-allow the conversion of radiative energy into heat. Microstructure design provides versatile strategies for controlling light-matter interactions. In particular, the deliberate engineering of the band structure in photonic materials is known to be an effective approach to amplify absorption in materials. However, photonic amplification is generally tied to high optical contrast materials which limit the applicability of the concept to metamaterials such as microfabricated metal-air hybrids. This contribution describes the first observation of pronounced amplification of absorption in low contrast opals formed by the self-assembly of polymer-tethered particles. The dependence of the amplification factor on the length scale and degree of order of materials as well as the angle of incidence reveal that it is related to the slow photon effect. A remarkable amplification factor of 16 is shown to facilitate the rapid "melting" of opal films even in the absence of "visible" absorption. The results point to novel opportunities for tailoring light-matter interactions in hybrid materials that can benefit the manipulation and fabrication of functional materials.

Highlights

  • The manipulation of light–matter interactions through microstructure design have tions ranging from drug delivery to microfluidics and from ablation to fabrica- emerged as an important concept in the tion

  • The results point to novel opportunities for tailoring light–matter interactions in hybrid materials trapping can greatly enhance the absorption in a wide range of wavelengths.[3]

  • Since at the band edge the group velocity of the light is reduced, this observation suggested that the absorption enhancement is due to a slow-photon effect.[10a]. The prolonged residence time of light raises the probability of photon absorption and the energy transfer efficacy in brush particle films assembled from DP955

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Summary

Introduction

The manipulation of light–matter interactions through microstructure design have tions ranging from drug delivery to microfluidics and from ablation to fabrica- emerged as an important concept in the tion. Since at the band edge the group velocity of the light is reduced, this observation suggested that the absorption enhancement is due to a slow-photon effect.[10a] The prolonged residence time of light raises the probability of photon absorption and the energy transfer efficacy in brush particle films assembled from DP955.

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