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Photo‐Responsive Azobenzene‐Containing Inverse Opal Films for Information Security

Stimuli‐responsive photonic crystals (PCs) have attracted increasing attentions owing to the unique optical feature in regulating the propagation of light and tunable structural colors in response to external stimuli, emerging application potential on diverse fields. However, the development of stim...

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Published in:Advanced functional materials 2023-10, Vol.33 (42)
Main Authors: Yang, Xiaoyan, Jin, Haibao, Tao, Xinfeng, Yao, Yuan, Xie, Yufeng, Lin, Shaoliang
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c333t-26aef155859f36406473525dcdf03b07bb0f90874f2890d6cc51c83b3f66156e3
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container_issue 42
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creator Yang, Xiaoyan
Jin, Haibao
Tao, Xinfeng
Yao, Yuan
Xie, Yufeng
Lin, Shaoliang
description Stimuli‐responsive photonic crystals (PCs) have attracted increasing attentions owing to the unique optical feature in regulating the propagation of light and tunable structural colors in response to external stimuli, emerging application potential on diverse fields. However, the development of stimuli‐responsive PCs with wide visible light range, broad shift of bandgaps, and adjustable responsive rates for counterfeiting remains challenging. Herein, a simple strategy for the preparation of photo‐responsive azobenzene‐containing inverse opal (AzoIO) films is reported. First, azobenzene‐containing composites are generated by filling functional monomers into voids of silica colloids crystals. Followed by the thermal polymerization and subsequent etching, a series of AzoIO films are successfully fabricated with adjustable structural colors in wide visible wavelength. Upon irradiation with linearly polarized visible light (LPVL), a slowly broad blueshift of bandgaps (≈138 nm, 3200 s) is observed due to the anisotropic shrinkage of the periodic PC structures. However, UV light irradiation contributed to a fast broad blueshift of bandgaps (≈131 nm, 10 s), owing to the photoisomerization merit of azobenzene moiety. The proof‐of‐concept study on the applications in light‐modulated multicolored writable paper, encryption films, and fast writing/erasing demonstrated the potential for information security. This work paves an avenue for developing promising optical anti‐counterfeiting materials.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/adfm.202304424
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subjects Azo compounds
Counterfeiting
Electrons
Energy gap
Light irradiation
Linear polarization
Materials science
Photonic crystals
Security
Stimuli
Ultraviolet radiation
title Photo‐Responsive Azobenzene‐Containing Inverse Opal Films for Information Security
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