Use of thulium-sensitized rare earth-doped low phonon energy crystalline hosts for IR sources

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Abstract

Crystalline hosts with low phonon energies enable novel energy transfer processes when doped with rare earth ions. Two applications of energy transfer for rare earth ions in thuliumsensitized low phonon energy crystals that result in infrared luminescence are discussed. One application is an endothermic, phonon-assisted cross-relaxation process in thulium-doped yttrium chloride that converts lattice phonons to infrared emission, which raises the possibility of a fundamentally new method for achieving solid-state optical cooling. The other application is an optically pumped mid-IR phosphor using thulium-praseodymiumdoped potassium lead chloride that converts 805-nm diode light to broadband emission from 4,000 to 5,500 nm. These two applications in chloride crystals are discussed in terms of critical radii calculated from Forster-Dexter energy transfer theory. It is found that the critical radii for electric dipole-dipole interactions in low phonon energy chloride crystals are comparable to those in conventional oxide and fluoride crystals. It is the reduction in multiphonon relaxation rates in chloride crystals that enable these additional energy transfer processes and infrared luminescence. © 2013 Ganem and Bowman.

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Ganem, J., & Bowman, S. R. (2013). Use of thulium-sensitized rare earth-doped low phonon energy crystalline hosts for IR sources. Nanoscale Research Letters, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1556-276X-8-455

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