Luminescence Quenching via Deep Defect States: A Recombination Pathway via Oxygen Vacancies in Ce-Doped YAG
Journal article, 2021

Luminescence quenching via nonradiative recombination channels limits the efficiency of optical materials such as phosphors and scintillators and therefore has implications for conversion efficiency and device lifetimes. In materials such as Ce-doped yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG:Ce), quenching shows strong dependence on both temperature and activator concentration, limiting the fabrication of high-intensity white-light emitting diodes with high operating temperatures. Here, we reveal by means of first-principles calculations an efficient recombination mechanism in YAG:Ce that involves oxygen vacancies and gives rise to thermally activated concentration quenching. We demonstrate that the key requirements for this mechanism to be active are localized states with strong electron-phonon coupling. These conditions are commonly found for intrinsic defects such as anion vacancies in wide band gap materials. The present findings are therefore relevant to a broad class of optical materials and shine light on thermal quenching mechanisms in general.

Author

Christopher Linderälv

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Daniel Åberg

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Paul Erhart

Chalmers, Physics, Condensed Matter and Materials Theory

Chemistry of Materials

0897-4756 (ISSN) 1520-5002 (eISSN)

Vol. 33 1 73-80

Analysis and Modelling Service for Engineering Materials Studied with Neutrons

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2018-06482), 2018-11-01 -- 2020-12-31.

Computational Materials Design Of Transport Properties

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, 2015-07-01 -- 2020-06-30.

Subject Categories

Computational Mathematics

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c02449

More information

Latest update

12/21/2023