Bulk undoped ZnS materials exhibit relatively bright yet diverse luminescence behavior, which has, in recent years, been attributed to intrinsic defects. However, the luminescence also resembles that of doped materials, implying a role of impurities. Luminescence features have also been attributed to oxygen impurities causing defect clusters or energy band anti-crossing. Thus, this study couples optical and electrical techniques, such as band edge transmission, photoluminescence (PL), PL excitation, radioluminescence, thermoluminescence, optical deep level transient spectroscopy, and photoinduced current transient spectroscopy, to explore the identity of defect levels. ZnS materials studied are commercial single crystals made by physical vapor transport, high-pressure Bridgman, and powder processing. These undoped bulk ZnS exhibit luminescence behavior similar to that of reported doped ZnS powders (10−4 to 10−2 mol. % doping for luminescent materials). Dopants (such as Al, Cl, Cu, and Ag) are also commonly found impurities in ZnS; hence, it is reasonable to believe they have a role in the luminescence of nominally undoped ZnS. By comparing the variation in optical and electrical properties between samples to the processing method and the rich literature on intentionally doped ZnS, this study shows a possible dominant contribution of impurities and impurity-containing defects on the luminescence of bulk “undoped” ZnS. Hence, there is no need to resort to complex mechanisms to explain the luminescence, but rather the metal and halide impurities and their defect complexes determine the main characteristics of luminescence in this wide-bandgap semiconductor.
In this study, four yttrium aluminum garnet single crystals co-doped with cerium and lithium were produced by the Czochralski method and the scintillation and defect properties were investigated. Our results demonstrated an increase in luminescence with Li co-doping as well as elimination of longer decay times. Surprisingly, although Li is monovalent, no oxidation of cerium from Ce3+ to Ce4+ was found as would be expected to maintain charge neutrality. Additionally, thermoluminescence results indicated a reduction in the trapping of charge carriers by shallow and deep traps, and room temperature photoluminescence measurements showed an improvement in the Ce3+ 5d to 4f transition efficiency.
Nuclear wastes generated from reprocessing of used nuclear fuel tend to contain a large fraction of rare earth (RE, e.g., Nd3+), transition (TM, e.g., Mo6+, Zr4+), alkali (A, e.g., Cs+), and alkaline earth cations (AE, e.g., Ba2+, Sr2+). Various strategies have been considered for immobilizing such waste streams, varying from nominally crystal-free glass to glass-ceramic to multi-phase ceramic waste forms. For glass and glass-ceramic waste forms, the added glass-forming system is generally alkali-alkaline earth-aluminoborosilicate (i.e., Na-Ca-Al-B-Si oxide). In a US-UK collaborative project, summarized here, we investigated the glass structure and crystallization dependence on compositional changes in simulated nuclear waste glasses and glass-ceramics. Compositions ranged in complexity from five – to – eight oxides. Specifically, the roles of Mo and rare earths are investigated, since a proposed glass-ceramic waste form contains crystalline phases such as powellite [(AE,A,RE)MoO4] and oxyapatite [(RE,AE,A)10Si6O26], and the precipitation of molybdenum phases is known to be affected by the rare earth concentration in the glass. Additionally, the effects of other chemical additions have been systematically investigated, including Zr, Ru, P, and Ti. A series of studies were also undertaken to ascertain the effect of the RE size on glass structure and on partitioning to crystal phases, investigating similarities and differences in glasses containing single RE oxides of Sc, Y, La, Ce, Nd, Sm, Er, Yb, or Lu. Finally, the effect of charge compensation was investigated by considering not only the commonly assessed peralkaline glass but also metaluminous and peraluminous compositions. Glass structure and crystallization studies were conducted by spectroscopic methods (i.e., Raman, X-ray absorption, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), optical absorption, photoluminescence, photoluminescence excitation, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy), microscopy (i.e., scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, electron probe microanalysis), scattering (i.e., X-ray and neutron diffraction, small angle measurements), and physical characterization (i.e., differential thermal analysis, liquidus, viscosity, density). This paper will give an overview of the research program and some example unpublished results on glass-ceramic crystallization kinetics, microstructure, and Raman spectra, as well as some examples of the effects of rare earths on the absorption, luminescence, and NMR spectra of starting glasses. The formal collaboration described here has resulted in the generation of a large number of results, some of which are still in the process of being published as separate studies.
Lithium and sodium aluminosilicates are important glass‐forming systems for commercial glass‐ceramics, as well as being important model systems for ion transport in battery studies. In addition, uncontrolled crystallization of LiAlSiO4 (eucryptite) in high‐Li2O compositions, analogous to the more well‐known problem of NaAlSiO4 (nepheline) crystallization, can cause concerns for long‐term chemical durability in nuclear waste glasses. To study the relationships between glass structure and crystallization, nine glasses were synthesized in the LixNa1‐xAlSiO4 series, from x = 0 to x = 1. Raman spectra, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy (Li‐7, Na‐23, Al‐27, Si‐29), and X‐ray diffraction were used to study the quenched and heat‐treated glasses. It was found that different LiAlSiO4 and NaAlSiO4 crystal phases crystallize from the glass depending on the Li/Na ratio. Raman and NMR spectra of quenched glasses suggest similar structures regardless of alkali substitution. Li‐7 and Na‐23 NMR spectra of the glass‐ceramics near the endmember compositions show evidence of several differentiable sites distinct from known LixNa1‐xAlSiO4 crystalline phases, suggesting that these measurements can reveal subtle chemical environment differences in mixed‐alkali systems, similar to what has been observed for zeolites.
Sn and Si are the typical dopants for achieving tunable n-type conductivity of β-Ga2O3 single crystals grown from the melt. Here, we explore Zr doping in β-Ga2O3 as assessed with UV–vis-NIR, Hall Effect, I–V, and CV measurements and hybrid functional calculations. Single crystals were grown from the melt with nominal Zr doping between 0.1 and 0.5 at% using Czochralski and vertical gradient freeze methods in Ar + O2. Our results suggest that ZrGa behaves as a shallow donor, with a measured activation energy of ∼10 meV. Our samples show an electron mobility ∼73–112 cm2 V−1 s−1, resistivity ∼0.08–0.01 ohm cm, and carrier density of n = 6.5 × 1017−5 × 1018 cm3 at room temperature.
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