Abstract

Point defects in the host lattice of a scintillator material can trap carriers, slowing down their migration or even preventing their transfer to luminescent centers. Such competition schemes between defects and luminescent centers may explain also the hysteresis effect, which consists of a progressive enhancement of scintillation efficiency with accumulated dose. We propose a comparison between the scintillation hysteresis effect of Yb-doped sol–gel silica glasses in bulk and fiber forms, and we correlate them with traps monitored by wavelength-resolved thermally stimulated luminescence in both materials. The results demonstrate that the fiber-drawing process is responsible for modifications of the defectiveness of the glass network, with a change of the local distribution of the traps surrounding the luminescent center. The consequence of such modifications is the removal, in the fiber samples, of the thermally stimulated luminescence peak ascribed to traps closer to Yb ions and unstable at room tempera...

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