
Tunable broadband near-infrared luminescence in glass realized by defect-engineering
Author(s) -
Linling Tan,
Changgui Lin,
Mingying Peng,
Yuanzheng Yue
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.430013
Subject(s) - luminescence , materials science , analytical chemistry (journal) , optoelectronics , chemistry , chromatography
Tunable broadband near-infrared (NIR)-luminescent materials play a crucial role as light sources and tunable fiber lasers in modern technologies such as high-capacity telecommunication, imaging, and remote sensing. Despite considerable effort in studying the luminescent materials doped with rare-earth or transition metal ions, it is still challenging to achieve tunable broadband emission in photonic materials, especially in glasses, for active-fiber applications. In the present work, such NIR emission is achieved by modifying oxygen-deficient structural defects (i.e., singly ionized oxygen vacancies (VO∙) in tellurium (Te)-doped germanate glass). The local glass chemistry around Te is controlled by engineering singly ionized oxygen vacancies (VO∙) in alkali-alumino-germanate glass. This enables fine-tuning of the configurations and chemical states of Te centers over a wide range of chemical states, from ionic states to neutrally charged clusters and to positively charged clusters, resulting in various intriguing luminescent behaviors (e.g., wavelength-tunable emission, great emission enhancement, bandwidth extension).