Zinc and lead chloro-tellurite glasses are candidates for hosting rare earth ions, due to a rare earth ion solubility as high as 10mol% and maximum vibrational energies lower than 800cm 1 , combined with a chemical durability superior to that of halide glasses and optical transparency from the visible to the middle infrared.A series of lasses in the TeO2 -ZnO-ZnCl2 system, doped with 1-10mol% ErCl3, were prepared and heat treated in air between 350 and 500C.The early stages of the formation of the crystalline phases formed within the TeO2-based glass matrix were determined in situ by time-resolved X-ray powder diffraction, recorded during thermal treatment, using a synchrotron radiation source.Only two crystalline phases, TeO2 and Zn2Te3O8, were identified.Extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy above the Er L III edge was used, to charac-terize the Er 3+ environments in these oxyhalide glasses, before and after heat treatment.The presence of erbium was found to affect the crystallisation process, since other crystalline phases were formed, which could not be identified, but which appear to include Er 3+ ions.
Influence of Er 3+ on the early stages of crystallization of chloro-tellurite glasses studied by XRD and EXAFS
FDAcapito
2004
Abstract
Zinc and lead chloro-tellurite glasses are candidates for hosting rare earth ions, due to a rare earth ion solubility as high as 10mol% and maximum vibrational energies lower than 800cm 1 , combined with a chemical durability superior to that of halide glasses and optical transparency from the visible to the middle infrared.A series of lasses in the TeO2 -ZnO-ZnCl2 system, doped with 1-10mol% ErCl3, were prepared and heat treated in air between 350 and 500C.The early stages of the formation of the crystalline phases formed within the TeO2-based glass matrix were determined in situ by time-resolved X-ray powder diffraction, recorded during thermal treatment, using a synchrotron radiation source.Only two crystalline phases, TeO2 and Zn2Te3O8, were identified.Extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy above the Er L III edge was used, to charac-terize the Er 3+ environments in these oxyhalide glasses, before and after heat treatment.The presence of erbium was found to affect the crystallisation process, since other crystalline phases were formed, which could not be identified, but which appear to include Er 3+ ions.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


