6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265c6b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Evidence of different red emissions in irradiated germanosilicate materials

Aziz BoukenterDiego Di FrancescaAntonino AlessiSimonpietro AgnelloMarco CannasYoucef OuerdaneNicolas RichardSylvain Girard

subject

Optical fiberAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticPhotoluminescenceMaterials scienceGe-doped silicaRadiation effectBiophysicsAnalytical chemistryCondensed Matter Physic02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesBiochemistrylaw.inventionPoint defectParamagnetismlaw0103 physical sciencesPhotoluminescence excitationIrradiationElectron paramagnetic resonancePhotoluminescence010302 applied physics[PHYS]Physics [physics]Chemistry (all)Settore FIS/01 - Fisica SperimentaleGeneral Chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsCrystallographic defectAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsPhotoexcitation13. Climate action0210 nano-technologyLuminescence

description

International audience; This experimental investigation is focused on a radiation induced red emission in Ge doped silica materials, elaborated with different methods and processes. The differently irradiated samples as well as the pristine ones were analyzed with various spectroscopic techniques, such as confocal microscopy luminescence (CML), time resolved luminescence (TRL), photoluminescence excitation (PLE) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). Our data prove that irradiation induces a red luminescence related to the presence of the Ge atoms. Such emission features a photoexcitation spectrum in the UV-blue spectral range and, TRL measurements show that its decrease differs from a single exponential law with a lifetime of tens of nanoseconds. CML measurements under laser at 633 nm evidenced the lack of correlation of the emission here reported with that of the Ge- or Si- non bridging oxygen hole centers. Moreover, our EPR experiments highlighted the lack of correlation between the red emitting defect with other radiation induced paramagnetic centers such as the E′Ge and Ge(2). The relation of the investigated emission with the H(II) defects, previously considered as responsible for a red emission, can not be totally excluded.

10.1016/j.jlumin.2016.04.044https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01528173