Abstract

Photoinduced processes of Sm 3+-doped sodium borate glasses under high-power, 800 nm femtosecond laser irradiation have been studied. Both the photoreduction of Sm 3+ to Sm 2+ and the formation of intrinsic defects are observed at an irradiance well below the threshold for laser-induced damage. We propose that these photoinduced processes arise from the linear and two-photon absorption of the short-wavelength component of the supercontinuum and the subsequent ionization of the glass matrix. Photochemical hole burning (PHB) has been observed for 5 D 0– 7 F 0 transition of Sm 2+ in the sodium borate glasses irradiated with near-infrared femtosecond laser pulses. The efficiency of hole burning at 77 K was about 5 times higher in the irradiated glasses than in thermally reduced glasses. We consider that both the metastable Sm 2+ and the intrinsic defects were responsible for the highly efficient PHB phenomenon.

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