We report detailed
optical studies of BaWO4:Ce and BaWO4:Ce,Na
single crystals. The material does not emit any luminescence at ambient
pressure under near-UV (325 nm) excitation. Efficient green light
is emitted only at high pressure (HP) and low temperature (LT). The
luminescence is of excitonic character, since the lowest Ce3+ 5d level is degenerate with the conduction band also under hydrostatic
pressures. To explain these phenomena, absorption measurements were
made together with powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) and confocal micro-Raman
and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Raman experiments
confirm the existence of a metastable phase, induced by certain nonhydrostatic
conditions, before the reversible transition at a high-pressure range
above 9 GPa, where efficient photoluminescence (PL) occurs. Although
the phase transition is reversible, it proceeds with a prominent hysteresis
observed in luminescence and Raman experiments. FTIR focuses on the
existence of Ce3+ multisites observed during LT measurements.
The structure of calcium europium orthoborate, Ca3Eu2(BO3)4, was determined using high-resolution powder X-ray diffraction data collected at the ID22 beamline (ESRF) under ambient conditions, as well as at high temperature. Rietveld refinement allowed determination of the lattice constants and structural details, including the Ca/Eu ratios at the three cationic sites and their evolution with temperature. Clear thermal expansion anisotropy was found, and slope changes of lattice-constant dependencies on temperature were observed at 923 K. Above this temperature the changes in occupation of the Ca/Eu sites occur, exhibiting a tendency towards a more uniform Eu distribution over the three Ca/Eu sites. Possible structural origins of the observed thermal expansion anisotropy are discussed.
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