color centers (original) (raw)

Author: the photonics expert

Definition: crystal defects which introduce additional light absorption or emission features in crystalline materials

Alternative term: F-centers

Category: article belongs to category physical foundations physical foundations

DOI: 10.61835/stu [Cite the article](encyclopedia%5Fcite.html?article=color centers&doi=10.61835/stu): BibTex plain textHTML Link to this page LinkedIn

Color centers are crystal defects which introduce additional light absorption and/or emission features in crystalline materials because they have electronic properties which substantially deviate from those of the undisturbed crystal lattice. For example, it can occur that an electrically negative ion is missing at a certain lattice position, and electrons fill the vacancy, being trapped by surrounding positive ions. In other cases, ions have migrated to an unusual interstitial position.

The alternative term F-center goes back to the German term Farbzentrum (with Farbe = color).

Origins of Color Centers

Such crystal defects can have different origins:

Defect Healing by Thermal Excitation

Crystal effects can often be healed based on thermal excitations, which allows ions to relax to their “normal” positions. In fact, some color centers which are used in color center lasers are healed quite rapidly at room temperature. Therefore, such crystals need to be permanently kept at cryogenic temperatures to preserve the color centers. Other color centers start to disappear with an appreciable rate only at higher temperatures of hundreds of degrees Celsius, or cannot be healed at all by heating.

Absorption and Emission

Frequently, color centers with a sufficiently high density cause substantial absorption of light at optical wavelengths where there would normally be no absorption, since the photon energy is below the band gap energy. The effect of the defects can be described as introducing additional defect levels in the energy level diagram, which lie between the conduction and valence band, so that lower-energy photons are allowed to participate in absorption processes. As a result of the additional absorption, some naturally completely transparent crystals exhibit pronounced colors due to some density of colors centers. For example, transmitted light may look yellow if color centers lead to the absorption of blue light. In other cases, where a material with lower band gap energy is already naturally yellow, the effect of additional absorption by color centers is a less apparent color change.

It is also possible that crystal defects allow the emission of light at new wavelengths – spontaneous emission and also stimulated emission. The latter is exploited in color center lasers. They are normally based on crystals where certain color centers are induced by high-energy irradiation. Certain laser wavelengths can be reached by such lasers, which are difficult to reach with other laser sources.

Quenching of Radiation

Crystal defects like color centers are sometimes observed to favor the non-radiative decay of excited laser-active ions. For example, there may be an energy transfer from an excited ion to a nearby color center, which subsequently radiates the energy very quickly (typically at somewhat longer wavelengths). At the same time, the emission of the laser-active ions is quenched.

Note that the color centers can have much shorter upper-state lifetimes, compared with laser-active ions.

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