Single crystals of BaWO4, BaWO4: 0.5 at. % Ce; BaWO4: 1 at. % Ce; BaWO4: 0.5 at. % Ce, 1 at. % Na; and BaWO4: 1 at. % Ce, 2 at. % Na were grown from an inductively heated iridium crucible by the Czochralski method on a Malvern MSR4 puller. They were investigated using Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at helium temperatures. One isolated center of high (D2d or S4) symmetry was found and two or more other centers of lower symmetry were identified, depending on crystal doping. From the fitting using the EPR-NMR program, the following parameters of g-matrix for the high symmetry center were found: gx = 1.505, gy = 1.505, and gz = 2.731. The linewidth vs. temperature revealed an increasing exponential tendency with increasing temperature. It showed one phonon at the lower temperatures and a Raman + Orbach effect at the higher temperatures. Radioluminescence and pulse height spectra showed rather poor scintillation properties, without any contribution from cerium emission.
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.
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