Physics World 01月07日
New method recycles quantum dots used in microscopic lasers
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英国斯特拉斯克莱德大学的研究人员开发了一种新方法,可以回收用于制造超微粒激光器的有价值的半导体胶体量子点。回收的粒子可以重复用于构建新的激光器,其光致发光量子产率几乎与使用新粒子制造的激光器一样高。该方法通过超声波和热将量子点从油相中分离出来,然后用水分离并提纯,回收率高达85%,且回收量子点的光致发光量子产率与原始粒子相当。这种简单实用的技术为解决量子点稀缺和环境污染问题提供了新思路。

🔬 胶体量子点(CQDs)是制造超微粒激光器的关键材料,但其成分昂贵且有时有毒,回收利用迫在眉睫。

♻️ 研究人员通过超声波和热将量子点从油相中分离,再用水分离并提纯,成功回收了85%的量子点,且回收的量子点性能与原始量子点相当。

💡 此回收方法简单实用,无需特殊设备,适用于缺乏离心机和洗涤器等设备的实验室,并有望应用于其他自组装纳米复合材料的回收。

🚀 证明了超微粒激光器具有可重复使用性,为将超微粒技术应用于生物医学等领域提供了依据,例如靶向药物输送系统。

Researchers at the University of Strathclyde, UK, have developed a new method to recycle the valuable semiconductor colloidal quantum dots used to fabricate supraparticle lasers. The recovered particles can be reused to build new lasers with a photoluminescence quantum yield almost as high as lasers made from new particles.

Supraparticle lasers are a relatively new class of micro-scale lasers that show much promise in applications such as photocatalysis, environmental sensing, integrated photonics and biomedicine. The active media in these lasers – the supraparticles – are made by assembling and densely packing colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) in the microbubbles formed in a surfactant-stabilized oil-and-water emulsion. The underlying mechanism is similar to the way that dish soap, cooking oil and water mix when we do the washing up, explains Dillon H Downie, a physics PhD student at Strathclyde and a member of the research team led by Nicolas Laurand.

Supraparticles have a high refractive index compared to their surrounding medium. Thanks to this difference, light at the interface between them experiences total internal reflection. This means that when the diameter of the supraparticles is an integer multiple of the wavelength of the incident light, so-called whispering gallery modes (resonant light waves that travel around a concave boundary) form within the supraparticles.

“The supraparticles are therefore microresonators made of an optical gain material (the quantum dots),” explains Downie, “and individual supraparticles can be made to lase by optically pumping them.”

The problem is that many CQDs are made from expensive and sometimes toxic elements. Demand for these increasingly scarce elements will likely outstrip supply before the end of this decade, but at present, only 2% of quantum dots made from these rare-earth elements are recycled. While researchers have been exploring ways of recovering them from electronic waste, the techniques employed often require specialized instruments, complex bio-metallurgical absorbents and hazardous acid-leaching processes. A more environmentally friendly approach is thus sorely needed.

Exceptional recycling potential

In the new work, Laurand, Downie and colleagues recycled supraparticle lasers by first disassembling the CQDs in them. They did this by suspending the dots in an oil phase and applying ultrasonic high-frequency sound waves and heat. They then added water to separate out the dots. Finally, they filtered and purified the disassembled CQDs and tested their fluorescence efficiency before reassembling them into a new laser configuration.

Using this process, the researchers were able to recover 85% of the quantum dots from the initial supraparticle batch. They also found that the recycled quantum dots boasted a photoluminescence quantum yield of 83 ± 16%, which is comparable to the 86 ± 9% for the original particles.

“By testing the lasers’ performance both before and after this process we confirmed their exceptional recycling potential,” Downie says.

Simple, practical technique

Downie describes the team’s technique as simple and practical even for research labs that lack specialized equipment such as centrifuges and scrubbers. He adds that it could also be applied to other self-assembled nanocomposites.

“As we expect nanoparticle aggregates in everything from wearable medical devices to ultrabright LEDs in the future, it is, therefore, not inconceivable that some of these could be sent back for specialized recycling in the same way we do with commercial batteries today,” he tells Physics World. “We may even see a future where rare-earth or some semiconductor elements become critically scarce, necessitating the recycling for any and all devices containing such valuable nanoparticles.”

By proving that supraparticles are reusable, Downie adds, the team’s method provides “ample justification” to anyone wishing to incorporate supraparticle technology into their devices. “This is seen as especially relevant if they are to be used in biomedical applications such as targeted drug delivery systems, which would otherwise be limited to single-use,” he says.

With work on colloidal quantum dots and supraparticle lasers maturing at an incredible rate, Downie adds that it is “fantastic to be able to mature the process of their recycling alongside this progress, especially at such an early stage in the field”.

The study is detailed in Optical Materials Express.

The post New method recycles quantum dots used in microscopic lasers appeared first on Physics World.

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量子点回收 超微粒激光器 环保技术 可循环利用
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