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6 - Scopes of laser in spectroscopy

Spectroscopy deals with the interaction of light radiation with matter, which provides information on the structure and properties of matter (solids, liquids, and gasses). If laser light is used in place of the light radiation, then the spectroscopy is known as laser spectroscopy. Laser spectroscopy has emerged as a tool in many scientific techniques like tracking air quality, process control, medical research, national security, agriculture, artwork authentication, and many more. This is due to the special characteristics of lasers as compared to ordinary light. Although the emission of laser radiation is governed by the same rules and principles as that of any other light sources, laser light is not like any other ordinary source of radiation found in nature. It is a much more powerful technological tool than light from ordinary sources. Its features like coherence, monochromaticity, and collimation (directionality or low-beam divergence) make it special. The laser beam emerging from the output mirror of the resonant cavity is highly parallel, and its divergence (the spread in a beam of light) is typically a few milliradians, that is, negligibly small. The photons emitted even at a slight angle with respect to the tube axis bounce back into the walls of the tube and do not contribute to the output beam (not 100% true due to diffraction). The laser cavity is resonant only for the frequencies ν=nc/2d, where d is the separation between the mirrors of the resonant cavity adjusted as an integral of half of the wavelength, limiting the wavelength range (production of laser of well-defined wavelength). The intensity of the laser, defined as the power emitted per unit area of the output mirror per unit solid angle, is extremely high compared with that of a conventional source. The conventional sources of radiation are incoherent in nature, which means that any two photons of the electromagnetic waves of the same wavelength are out of phase, while the laser is both temporally and spatially coherent, which means that the coherence of the laser medium exists for a relatively long time and over a relatively large distance. Laser, by virtue of its coherent nature, is used for local heating, as in metal cutting, metal welding, and for holography. The coherent nature of the laser is by virtue of the mechanism through which it is produced, that is, the process of stimulated emission where photons are essentially copied or exactly in phase. The production of laser in the same phase takes place as all emitted photons are at exactly the same wavelength due to the transition between two fixed energy levels (the amplification mechanism of the laser). The simplest explanation for these properties of the laser is in the mechanism of the laser itself. The process mainly includes the stimulated emission, which takes place in the amplifying medium contained by the laser. This is done with the application of a set of mirrors used for feeding the light back to the amplifying medium so that the developed beam is grown continuously. The key concept for the realization of the laser operation is the principle of coherence accompanying stimulated emission. This stimulated emission needs the process of population inversion, for which the lasing medium must have at least three energy levels.

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11 - Experimental techniques for phosphor characterization

After the synthesis of phosphor materials, the main challenge is to characterize them properly for the desired functionality and properties. Characterization techniques could not be counted on fingers as they are many, but one can always select a few by keeping in mind the purpose of the synthesized material. This chapter is dedicated to the widespread characterization techniques used for phosphor materials. In order to consider the interest of researchers working in the field of phosphor materials, only those characterization techniques are discussed here that assess the fundamental properties of phosphors like phase, crystallinity, particle size, bandgap/refractive index, vibrational bands, luminescence efficiency, a lifetime of emission levels, and probability of nonradiative transition, etc. For the confirmation of the phase and crystallinity of the phosphors, the X-ray diffraction (XRD) technique is discussed. A scanning electron microscope (SEM) is included to know the morphology of the prepared phosphor. For measuring the particle size of dispersible phosphors, the scattering technique is discussed. For the determination of the bandgap and refractive index of the phosphors, the UV-Vis spectroscopy technique is discussed. To investigate the luminescence characteristics of the phosphors, photoluminescence, upconversion, and decay measurement techniques are discussed, and last, to know nonradiative transitions in phosphors the photoacoustic technique is discussed.

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1 - Review of quantum physics and atomic theory

Understating modern theories of solid-state physics is only possible if we understand quantum mechanics and its applications at the atomic levels. Therefore, this chapter presents the evolution of quantum physics and the chronological overview of the attempts to understand the microscopic picture of the atomic structure. Historically, the roots of atomic physics lie in many thought experiments, which believed that matter is made of tiny indivisible constituents called atoms. One of the oldest references in this context lies in the Indian philosophy by Maharishi Kanad in one of his books, “Vaisesika Sutra,” which propounded the matter as consisting of indestructible particles of indivisible paramanus (the atoms). He believed that these paramanus have their unique identity and specific properties. This idea was further advocated by Democritus, a Greek philosopher, who put forward the theory of the atomic universe (460–370BCE), which states that the world is made of hard (indestructible) indivisible particles (called the atoms) of matter moving through the empty space. The word atom is taken from the Greek word atomos means, literally, “uncuttable,” This thought-based hypothesis of the atoms was first supported experimentally by John Dalton in 1804, who demonstrated that the atoms are indestructible, indivisible, and alike for the same element. This is the first theory proposed on the experimental observations. These theories come over a wide gap of time but established the same concept that there are some indivisible constituents of matter. Another fact associated with the atoms was their charge neutrality.

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