|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
New laser technology has developed a new dye chemistry! Development
of the gallium-arsenic semiconductor laser (diode laser) that emits
laser light at 780-830 nm has made possible development of new
opto-electronic systems including laser optical recording systems,
thermal writing display systems, laser printing systems, and so on.
Medical applications of lasers in photodynamic therapy for the
treatment of cancer were also developed. In such systems, the
infrared absorbing dyes OR dyes) are currently used as effective
photoreceivers for diode lasers, and will become the key materials
in high technology. At the present time the chemistry of IR dyes is
the most important and interesting field in dye chemistry. Laser
light can be highly monochromatic, very well collimated, coher ent,
and, in some cases, extremely powerful. These characteristics make
diode lasers a very cheap, convenient, and useful light source for
a variety of applications in science and technology. For these
purposes, however, IR dyes with special characteristics are
required. To develop new IR dyes, it is most important to establish
the correlation between the chemical structures of dyes and other
characteristics of dyes, such as their absorption spectra.
Molecular design of IR dyes predicting the Amax and Emax values by
molecular orbital (MO) calculations is now possible even by using a
personal computer, and many types of new IR dyes have been
demonstrated. Also, new opto-electronic systems using IR dyes as
photoreceivers have been reported recently.
New laser technology has developed a new dye chemistry! Development
of the gallium-arsenic semiconductor laser (diode laser) that emits
laser light at 780-830 nm has made possible development of new
opto-electronic systems including laser optical recording systems,
thermal writing display systems, laser printing systems, and so on.
Medical applications of lasers in photodynamic therapy for the
treatment of cancer were also developed. In such systems, the
infrared absorbing dyes OR dyes) are currently used as effective
photoreceivers for diode lasers, and will become the key materials
in high technology. At the present time the chemistry of IR dyes is
the most important and interesting field in dye chemistry. Laser
light can be highly monochromatic, very well collimated, coher ent,
and, in some cases, extremely powerful. These characteristics make
diode lasers a very cheap, convenient, and useful light source for
a variety of applications in science and technology. For these
purposes, however, IR dyes with special characteristics are
required. To develop new IR dyes, it is most important to establish
the correlation between the chemical structures of dyes and other
characteristics of dyes, such as their absorption spectra.
Molecular design of IR dyes predicting the Amax and Emax values by
molecular orbital (MO) calculations is now possible even by using a
personal computer, and many types of new IR dyes have been
demonstrated. Also, new opto-electronic systems using IR dyes as
photoreceivers have been reported recently.
|
|