Abstract

We demonstrate that semiconducting CdF2 crystals doped with gallium provide an efficient medium for optical storage of information in static and dynamic regimes in a temperature range close to 300 K. Ga is a bistable center in CdF2 crystals. Illumination by visible and UV light below 500 nm causes phototransformation of these centers from a deep-localized to a shallow-hydrogenic state. They are separated by a vibronic barrier that causes metastability below 250 K. The phototransformation changes the local polarizability, and thus, the local refractive coefficient. This, in turn, allows writing a phase hologram with a diffraction efficiency and decay time being temperature dependent with the activation energy Eact=0.65±0.1 eV. A spontaneous decay of the grating is caused by a thermal recovery of the Ga impurity from the metastable hydrogenic state to the localized ground state. The writing is a local process.

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