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Hi,

Vlad Tarabara is hosting a prominent speaker on Friday who
will talk on efficient up-conversion and its applications.

The notice is below,

Phil

*Environmental Engineering seminar
*All students, faculty, and staff are welcome.

Friday, September 14, 2012
1:30pm -- 2:30pm
3540 Engineering Building

*
Dr. Jaehong Kim*
Georgia Power Distinguished Associate Professor
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology


*Two Approaches to Achieve Visible Light Upconversion for Environmental 
Application*


_Abstract _

This talk summarizes our most recent advances in developing 
antimicrobial/biocidal materials that function through light frequency 
amplification process called upconversion (UC). The first approach is 
based on inorganic luminescent materials that can convert visible light 
into germicidal UVC and have been shown to inactivate microorganisms 
deposited on dry surface and deter biofilm formation under commercial 
fluorescent light exposure. Upconversion efficiencies of current 
phosphor systems are too low for practical antimicrobial/biocidal 
application, however, and methods of enhancing internal optical 
efficiency are required for further advancement.   Lithium ion doping is 
a commonly employed, yet sparsely understood option for improving 
emission intensity in UC phosphors, including the visible-to-UV 
converting material Y2SiO5:Pr3+. In this work, for the first time, we 
have identified and quantified the major mechanisms by which Li+ 
enhances UC in a phosphor, using crystallographic and spectroscopic 
techniques in the form of X-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction, 
photoluminescence spectroscopy, and electron microscopy.   Results show 
that 10 at.% doping with Li+ improves UV emission 9-fold and is 
attributed to crystallite enlargement, induction of a phase change, and 
increasing inter-ion separation of the Pr3+ activator. The second UC 
approach is based on a completely different mechanism of sensitized 
triplet-triplet annihilation in an organic matrix. Moldable rubbery 
urethane materials generated from their corresponding polymeric 
precursors produce high efficiency regenerative green-to-blue 
upconverting solids when impregnated with benchmark palladium(II) 
octaethylporphyrin (PdOEP) sensitizers and 9,10-diphenylanthracene (DPA) 
acceptor/annihilator molecules. The cured soft materials promote 
sufficient diffusion at room temperature to support the sequential 
bimolecular reactions necessary for both triplet sensitization and 
triplet-triplet annihilation occurring between the precisely doped 
chromophores. UC quantum yields measured in linear incident light power 
dependence region exceeded 20%, over an order-of-magnitude greater than 
all previously investigated solids. These materials are intended as host 
materials enabling sub-bandgap sensitization of semiconductor 
photocatalysts such as TiO2 to enhance visible light susceptibility in 
environmental decontamination application.


Accommodations for persons with disabilities may be requested by 
contacting Mrs. Lori Larner ([log in to unmask]).

-- 
Volodymyr V. Tarabara, PhD
Associate Professor, Environmental Engineering
Associate Director, Environmental Science and Policy Program
Michigan State University
www.egr.msu.edu/~tarabara