Abstract

A series of novel single-phased niobate phosphors Sr2LaNbO6:xLn3+(Ln3+ = Eu3+/Sm3+) (SLNO:Ln3+) with red light emission was successfully synthesized by a conventional solid-state method and characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), X-ray diffraction, and photoluminescence. The phosphors showed high thermal stabilities, and at 423 K they still retained 60.7% and 80.7% emission efficiencies for the Eu3+ and Sm3+ variants, respectively. There is a difference in decay time between Eu3+ and Sm3+ due to the energy transit in different energy levels. The crystalline structure was described as a double-perovskite structure with several hexa-coordinated sites. The synthesized Eu3+ phosphor had more favorable characteristics for LEDs and a prototype device was fabricated with blue-green commercial LED phosphors, Sr2LaNbO6:0.13Eu3+, and a 395 nm-emitting InGaN chip, which exhibited warm white light, with a color temperature of 4833 K. The current study demonstrates that Sr2LaNbO6:0.13Eu3+ can be a potent red phosphor in LED applications.

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