6533b859fe1ef96bd12b775a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Visible luminescence peculiar to sintered silica nanoparticles: Spectral and decay properties

Marco CannasFranco Mario GelardiL. SpallinoC. CangialosiC. CangialosiLavinia Vaccaro

subject

Materials scienceSintering Silica nanoparticles Time-resolved Luminescence Defect stateBiophysicsAnalytical chemistryNanoparticleSinteringGeneral ChemistryAtmospheric temperature rangeCondensed Matter PhysicsBiochemistryMolecular physicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsRadiative transferLuminescenceSpectroscopyTunable laserExcitation

description

We report that the sintering at 1000 degrees C of silica nanoparticles (an average diameter of 14 nm) produces a transparent sample that exhibits a bright visible emission under UV excitation. The use of time resolved luminescence spectroscopy and a tunable laser source allows us to single out three contributions centered at 1.96 eV, 2.41 eV and 3.43 eV. The excitation spectra of these emissions evidence bell shaped bands consistent with transitions between localized defects' states. For each emission we study the intensity and the lifetime in the temperature range from 300 K down to 10 K, thus evidencing the competition between radiative and non-radiative processes in the optical cycle of luminescent centers. The comparison with the luminescence properties of silica, both nanoparticles and bulk, points out that the observed emissions are peculiar to the sintered silica network. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. We report that the sintering at 1000 °C of silica nanoparticles an average diameter of 14 nm ) produces a transparent sample that exhibits a bright visible emission under UV excitation. The use of time resolved luminescence spectroscopy and a tunable laser source allows us to single out three contributions centered at 1.96 eV, 2.41 eV and 3.43 eV. The excitation spectra of these emissions evidence bell shaped bands consistent with transitions between localized defects’ states. For each emission we study the intensity and the lifetime in the temperature range from 300 K down to10K, thus evidencing the competition between radiative and non-radiative processes in the optical cycle of luminescent centers. The comparison with the luminescence properties of silica, both nanoparticles and bulk, points out that the observed emissions are peculiar to the sintered silica network.

10.1016/j.jlumin.2015.05.020http://hdl.handle.net/10447/166027