Begin of page section:
Page sections:

  • Go to contents (Accesskey 1)
  • Go to position marker (Accesskey 2)
  • Go to main navigation (Accesskey 3)
  • Go to sub navigation (Accesskey 4)
  • Go to additional information (Accesskey 5)
  • Go to page settings (user/language) (Accesskey 8)
  • Go to search (Accesskey 9)

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Page settings:

English en
Deutsch de
Search
Login

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Search:

Search for details about Uni Graz
Close

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections


Search

Begin of page section:
Main navigation:

Page navigation:

  • University

    University
    • About the University
    • Organisation
    • Faculties
    • Library
    • Working at University of Graz
    • Campus
    Developing solutions for the world of tomorrow - that is our mission. Our students and our researchers take on the great challenges of society and carry the knowledge out.
  • Research Profile

    Research Profile
    • Our Expertise
    • Research Questions
    • Research Portal
    • Promoting Research
    • Research Transfer
    • Ethics in Research
    • Commission for Scientific Integrity
    Scientific excellence and the courage to break new ground. Research at the University of Graz creates the foundations for making the future worth living.
  • Studies

    Studies
    • Prospective Students
    • Students
  • Community

    Community
    • International
    • Location
    • Research and Business
    • Alumni
    The University of Graz is a hub for international research and brings together scientists and business experts. Moreover, it fosters the exchange and cooperation in study and teaching.
Topics
  • Sustainable University
  • Researchers answer
  • Work for us
Close menu

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
You are here:

University of Graz Natural sciences Institute of Physics News From Daguerre to nanooptics
  • About the institute
  • Our research
  • Personalities
  • Student Services
  • News
  • Events

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Thursday, 18 February 2021

From Daguerre to nanooptics

Schematic measurement setup (left) and dispersion relation of a silver iodide film on aluminum (right). Image: Uni Graz/Nanooptics group

Schematic measurement setup (left) and dispersion relation of a silver iodide film on aluminum (right). Image: Uni Graz/Nanooptics group

What the development of photography has to do with hail defense and optical nanotechnology.

Based on the developments of Louis Daguerre and William Henry Fox Talbot, photography spread rapidly in the late 1830s. The basis for this was the light-sensitive material silver iodide. Although photography has developed in other directions in the meantime, silver iodide is still used in our latitudes and in considerable quantities: in the form of condensation nuclei to ward off hail.

But silver iodide is also a promising light-emitting material that can be nanostructured quite easily and whose emission can be efficiently coupled to other nanostructures. Together with the Nanooptics research group, this is exactly what the Iranian physicist Razieh Talebi (Isfahan University) shows in a current publication. In the last few years she has been to Graz twice as a visiting scientist, drawing on her experience with silver iodide from earlier years. Extended by numerical simulations, the experimental results demonstrate strong coupling effects with plasmonic nanostructures made of aluminum. The fact that these effects were achieved for the first time in the blue spectral range opens up new possibilities for nanooptical and sensor applications.

Razieh Talebi, Harald Ditlbacher, Joachim R. Krenn, Andreas Hohenau
Coupling Silver Iodide Emitters to Aluminum Plasmons
J. Phys. Chem. C 125, 2519−2523 (2021)

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.0c09025

 

created by Joachim Krenn

Related news

Teaching vignettes for working with Arduino in teacher education

The field of physics education focuses, among other things, on how pre-service teachers can be supported in using digital media effectively in science education. One area of research specifically addresses digital data acquisition using Arduino microcontrollers.

Flawlessness defying imperfection

Researchers from the OpNaQ group (Banzer) at the University of Graz and international partners have demonstrated a miniaturized silicon‑nitride photonic chip that can precisely measure the polarization of visible light, even though some of its own components are imperfect. The work, published recently in Advanced Photonics Nexus, demonstrates a new class of passive, compact, and high‑speed on‑chip polarimeters designed for applications ranging from biomedical imaging to quantum communication.

How Do Adolescents Evaluate the Credibility of Instagram Posts?

A new article has been published in the Journal of Baltic Science Education.

Shaping the Future of Sensing, Together

The Christian Doppler Laboratory for Structured Matter Based Sensing (CDL-SMBS) is entering a new phase following its successful first evaluation at the end of 2024, and two expansions in 2024 and more recently in 2026.

Begin of page section:
Additional information:

University of Graz
Universitaetsplatz 3
8010 Graz
Austria
  • Contact
  • Web Editors
  • Moodle
  • UNIGRAZonline
  • Imprint
  • Data Protection Declaration
  • Accessibility Declaration
Weatherstation
Uni Graz

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections