Bright thermal (blackbody) emission of visible light from LnO (Ln = Pr, Tb), photoinduced by a NIR 980 nm laser.

Dalton Trans

Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciência dos Materiais, UFPE, Recife, PE 50.740-560, Brazil.

Published: February 2019

The increasing demand for renewable energy has been promoting a rapid development of photovoltaic technologies. Given this, photoinduced thermal emission is being explored with the aim of improving solar cell performance by converting low-energy IR photons into visible light. Here, we report the light-induced blackbody emission from LnO2 (Ln = Pr and Tb) as a potential emitter for thermophotovoltaic applications. Lanthanide dioxides display broad IR absorption and a direct optical band gap of 1.49 (PrO2) and 1.51 eV (TbO2). These materials achieve a maximum temperature of ∼1500 K under a power density excitation of 160 W cm-2 and display a stable bright light emission. Thermal emission can be tuned from laser power density modulation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8dt04649bDOI Listing

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