Abstract

The demand for tunable surface plasmon (SP) of embedded metal nanoparticles (NPs) in rare earth doped inorganic lasing glasses is ever-growing. Following melt quenching method Er3+ doped zinc-boro-tellurite glasses containing silver (Ag) NPs are prepared. Glasses are heat treated (thermally annealed) at varying temperatures and time duration to alter the NPs morphology which generates SP. The annealing assisted SP resonance mediated modification in spectral features is discerned. Samples heat treatment at 410 °C for 6 hrs duration ensures the reduction of Ag+ ions to Ago NPs. Thermally annealed glasses are characterized via XRD, UV–Vis-IR absorption, photoluminescence spectroscopy, and TEM imaging. XRD spectra confirm the amorphous nature of the glass and TEM image reveals the existence of homogeneously distributed spherically shaped silver NPs of average diameter ~4.5 nm. NPs are found to grow with the increase of both annealing time and temperature. The UV–Vis spectra exhibit seven absorption bands corresponding to 4f–4f transitions of Er3+ ions in the wavelength range of 500-650 nm. The localized SPR band is evidenced at 550 and 580 nm. Heat treatment causes a red shift of the plasmon peaks ascribed to the alteration in glass refractive index. Furthermore, the glass sample annealed for 6 hrs displays maximum enhancement in the emission intensity corresponding to the peaks centered at 536 (2H11/2→4I15/2), 550 (4S3/2→4I15/2) and 632 nm (4F9/2→4I15/2). This enhancement is primarily attributed to the local field effect of the silver NPs. Admirable features of the results suggest that our systematic method for heat treatment in tuning NPs size assisted SPR may contribute towards the development of functional glass.

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