Red-green-blue printing using luminescence-upconversion inks
2014; Royal Society of Chemistry; Volume: 2; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1039/c3tc32233e
ISSN2050-7534
AutoresJeevan Meruga, Aravind Baride, William Cross, Jon Kellar, P. Stanley May,
Tópico(s)Photonic Crystals and Applications
ResumoRecent advances in producing pre-defined 2D patterns of upconversion nanophosphors via photolithography and printing techniques present new opportunities for the use of these materials in security applications. Here, we demonstrate an RGB additive-color printing system that produces highly-resolved pre-defined patterns that are invisible under ambient lighting, but which are viewable as luminescent multi-color images under NIR excitation. Patterns are generated by independent deposition of three primary-color (red, green and blue) upconverting inks using an aerosol jet printer. The primary-color inks are printed as isolated and overlapping features to produce images that simultaneously emit red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, yellow and white upconversion luminescence. The dependence of the chromaticity of certain secondary colors (cyan and magenta) and white on NIR excitation power density can be exploited as an additional authentication feature. The development of an RGB upconversion printing system paves the way for an entirely new arena in security printing.
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