0000000000407154
AUTHOR
Gábor Corradi
Luminescence of ferroelectric crystals: LiNbO3and KNbO3
Abstract The thermostimulated luminescence and time-resolved luminescence of LiNbO3 (congruent, stoichiometric, Eu−, Mn−, or Cr−doped) and KNbO3 crystals (undoped, Fe−, or Mn− doped) excited by X-ray, pulsed nitrogen laser or pulsed electron beam were studied. The luminescence decay times of niobium-oxygen groups (regular or perturbed by defect or impurity) were obtained. It is shown that the energy transfer from bulk to the activator in LiNbO3 is not effective during the electron-hole recombination process.
Subpicosecond Laser Spectroscopy of Blue-Light-Induced Absorption in KNbO3 and LiNbO3
Pulses of 427-nm light from am amplified Ti:sapphire frequency-doubled laser are absorbed in two-photon band-gap excitations of KNbO3 and LiNbO3. Induced absorption spectra measured in the visible and recently extended in the infrared have been recorded as a function of delay from 0 to 250 ps after two-photon blue excitation. Samples include stoichiometric as well as congruent LiNbO3. Comparison is made to transient absorption in the nanosecond and longer time range induced by electron pulses of~10 ns width and 270 keV energy. Parts of the absorption can be attributed to bound and free polarons, including the intrinsic electron polaron.
Induced optical absorption and ITS relaxation in LiNbO3
Abstract Electron pulse induced absorption spectra and their decay kinetics have been investigated in LiNbO3 crystals with various Li/Nb ratios rasnging from congruent to stoichiometric composition. It is shown that the absorption spectra, the optical density and the decay kinetics depend on the Li/Nb ratio. The rising front of the induced absorption is too fast to be resolved. The room temperature decay, characterized by the half-lifetime Δt, is faster in the stoichiometric crystal (∼ 750 ns) than in the congrruent crystal (∼ 3.5 μs).
Relaxation of electronic excitations in LiNbO3crystals
Transient absorption both in stoichiometric and Mg doped congruent LiNbO was observed after pulsed electron beam excitation. The luminescence spectra and decay kinetics in these materials show different excitonic relaxation possibilities. The dependence on sample stoichiometry is also discussed.