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Dy 3+ ‐Doped Selenide Chalcogenide Glasses: Influence of Dy 3+ Dopant‐Additive and Containment
Author(s) -
Tang Zhuoqi,
Furniss David,
Neate Nigel C.,
Barney Emma,
Benson Trevor M.,
Seddon Angela B.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of the american ceramic society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.9
H-Index - 196
eISSN - 1551-2916
pISSN - 0002-7820
DOI - 10.1111/jace.14218
Subject(s) - chalcogenide , materials science , chalcogenide glass , ampoule , doping , dopant , selenide , crystallization , mineralogy , impurity , nucleation , foil method , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemical engineering , metallurgy , composite material , chemistry , optoelectronics , selenium , organic chemistry , chromatography , engineering
This work reports on process‐induced impurities in rare‐earth ion: Dy 3+ ‐doped selenide chalcogenide glasses, which are significant materials for active photonic devices in the mid‐infrared region. In particular, the effect of contamination from the silica glass ampoule containment used in chalcogenide glass synthesis is studied. Heat‐treating Dy‐foil‐only, and DyCl 3 ‐only, separately, within evacuated silica glass ampoules gives direct evidence of silica ampoule corrosion by the rare‐earth additives. The presence of [Ga 2 Se 3 ] associated with [Dy] on the silica glass ampoule that has been contact with the chalcogenide glass during glass melting, is reported for the first time. Studies of 0–3000 ppmw Dy 3+ ‐doped Ge 16.5 As 9 Ga 10 Se 64.5 glasses show that Dy‐foil is better than DyCl 3 as the Dy 3+ additive in Ge‐As‐Ga‐Se glass in aspects of avoiding bulk crystallization, improving glass surface quality and lowering optical loss. However, some limited Dy/Si/O related contamination is observed on the surfaces of Dy‐foil‐doped chalcogenide glasses, as found for DyCl 3 ‐doped chalcogenide glasses, reported in our previous work. The surface contamination indicates the production of Dy 2 O 3 and/or [≡Si‐O‐Dy=]‐containing particles during chalcogenide glass melting, which are potential light‐scattering centers in chalcogenide bulk glass and heterogeneous nucleation agents for α‐Ga 2 Se 3 crystals.