Giant nonlinear optical responses from photon avalanching nanoparticles
Changhwan Lee, Emma Xu, Yawei Liu, Ayelet Teitelboim, Kaiyuan Yao,, Angel Fernandez-Bravo, Agata Kotulska, Sang Hwan Nam, Yung Doug Suh, Artur, Bednarkiewicz, Bruce E. Cohen, Emory M. Chan, and P. James Schuck

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates room-temperature photon avalanching in nanostructures, enabling high-resolution, low-intensity superresolution imaging and broad applications in bioimaging, IR detection, and quantum optics.
Contribution
It reports the first observation of photon avalanching in single nanostructures at room temperature, expanding its applicability beyond bulk materials.
Findings
Photon avalanching observed at room temperature in nanocrystals.
Achieved sub-70 nm superresolution imaging with low excitation intensities.
Demonstrated nonlinear emission scaling with the 26th power of pump intensity.
Abstract
Avalanche phenomena leverage steeply nonlinear dynamics to generate disproportionately high responses from small perturbations and are found in a multitude of events and materials, enabling technologies including optical phase-conjugate imaging, infrared quantum counting, and efficient upconverted lasing. However, the photon avalanching (PA) mechanism underlying these optical innovations has been observed only in bulk materials and aggregates, and typically at cryogenic temperatures, limiting its utility and impact. Here, we report the realization of PA at room temperature in single nanostructures--small, Tm-doped upconverting nanocrystals--and demonstrate their use in superresolution imaging at near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths within spectral windows of maximal biological transparency. Avalanching nanoparticles (ANPs) can be pumped by continuous-wave or pulsed lasers and exhibit all of…
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