0000000000239922

AUTHOR

Joachim Lindblom

Luminescence study of defects in synthetic as-grown and HPHT diamonds compared to natural diamonds

The optically active defects in as-grown, high-pressure high-temperature-treated (HPHT), boron-doped, and synthetic diamonds (SD) grown with a nitrogen-getter, as well as of natural diamonds (ND), were characterized by absorption and luminescence spectroscopies using different excitation sources. The laser-excited photoluminescence (PL) spectra of SDs show numerous sharp lines characteristic for nickel-related centers, whereas NDs yield mainly broad PL bands. The emission from the nickel-related defects in NIR range increases and the maxima of the bands shift to lower energies with increasing temperature. Under UV and electron beam excitation, the yellow synthetic diamonds display green lum…

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Differentiation of natural and synthetic gem-quality diamonds by luminescence properties

Abstract Laser-excited time-resolved and UV-excited static photoluminescence (PL) as well as cathodoluminescence (CL) techniques were applied to identify the origin of diamonds. Samples represented natural faced and rough diamonds from diamond market and different kimberlites as well as the most common high pressure–high temperature (HPHT) and as-grown synthetic diamonds. The time-resolved PL spectra of natural and synthetic diamonds display clear mutual differences. The static PL and CL spectra of natural diamonds revealed emission bands caused by complex nitrogen–vacancy (N–V)-aggregates whereas the bands of synthetic diamonds reflect simple N–V-aggregates and nickel-containing defects. T…

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Hackmanite—The Natural Glow-in-the-Dark Material

“Glow-in-the-dark” materials are known to practically everyone who has ever traveled by airplane or cruise ship, since they are commonly used for self-lit emergency exit signs. The green afterglow, persistent luminescence (PeL), is obtained from divalent europium doped to a synthetic strontium aluminate, but there are also some natural minerals capable of afterglow. One such mineral is hackmanite, the afterglow of which has never been thoroughly investigated, even if its synthetic versions can compete with some of the best commercially available synthetic PeL materials. Here we combine experimental and computational data to show that the white PeL of natural hackmanite is generated and cont…

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