Abstract

Bismuth germanate glasses doped with a series of different concentrations of trivalent dysprosium ions were synthesized using melt-quenching method. The complex glass network is characterized by Raman spectrum, to put in evidence a structure combining [BiO3] pyramidal units, [BiO6] octahedral units and [GeO4] tetrahedral units. The arrangement of these structural units attract the introduction of Dy3+ ions thanks and endow the bismuth glass with the efficiently broadband mid-infrared emission. Upon the excitation source of an 808nm laser diode, a flat and broad emission from 2.5μm to 3.2μm with a bandwidth of 374nm was obtained in a 1.0mol% Dy2O3 doped glass, which corresponds to 6H13/2→6H15/2 transition. The emission cross section around 2.9μm is estimated to be 7.78×10−21cm2 based on the fluorescence spectrum. Hence, the advantageous spectroscopic characteristics reveal that Dy3+ doped bismuth gernamate glass is a potential cost effective host for the mid-infrared solid state lasers.

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