Abstract

We present experimental evidence for cooperative energy transfer from ${\mathrm{Tb}}^{3+}$ to two ${\mathrm{Yb}}^{3+}$ ions and a determination of the energy-transfer rate. Energy transfer from ${\mathrm{Tb}}^{3+}$ to ${\mathrm{Yb}}^{3+}$ was investigated by luminescence measurements on $({\mathrm{Yb}}_{x}{\mathrm{Y}}_{1\ensuremath{-}x})\mathrm{P}{\mathrm{O}}_{4}$ doped with 1% ${\mathrm{Tb}}^{3+}$. Time-resolved luminescence experiments were analyzed using Monte Carlo simulations based on theories for phonon-assisted, cooperative, and accretive energy transfer. The luminescence decay curves of the $^{5}D_{4}$ emission from ${\mathrm{Tb}}^{3+}$ show an excellent agreement with simulations based on cooperative energy transfer via dipole-dipole interaction, while a phonon-assisted or an accretive energy-transfer mechanism cannot explain the experimental results. The energy-transfer rate to two nearest-neighbor ${\mathrm{Yb}}^{3+}$ ions is $0.26\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}{\mathrm{ms}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}$. This corresponds to an upper limit of the energy-transfer efficiency of 88% in $\mathrm{Yb}\mathrm{P}{\mathrm{O}}_{4}$. Application of cooperative energy transfer has prospects for increasing the energy efficiency of crystalline Si solar cells by photon doubling of the high energy part of the solar spectrum.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call