Evidence for Visible Light Photochromism of V2O5
Chemistry of Materials2002Vol. 14(9), pp. 3730–3733
Citations Over TimeTop 21% of 2002 papers
Abstract
A binary oxide, polycrystalline V2O5, has been demonstrated to exhibit visible-light photochromism virtually for the first time. The oxide turns blue-black upon irradiation with visible laser light (514.5 nm) in air due to photoreduction of V5+, and this effect is confirmed to be irradiation-induced, not heat-induced. This visible-light photochromism is also demonstrated to be repeatable without significant degradation of the effect.
Related Papers
- → Photochromism of diarylethene single molecules and single crystals(2010)118 cited
- → Photochromism of diarylethene molecules and crystals(2010)115 cited
- → Synthesis and photochromism of 3‐indylfulgides(1991)4 cited
- → Creation of Molecularly Integrated Multi-responsive Photochromic Systems(2020)
- → Photochromic Sol–Gel Systems(2021)