Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDelilah Richards Modified over 9 years ago
1
FLUORIDE GLASSES – MATERIALS FOR BULK LASERS AND FIBRE OPTICAL AMLIFIERS Michał Żelechower, Silesian University of Technology, Katowice, Poland
2
1.What are fluoride glasses? 2.The role of rare earth elelments 3.Interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter a. Scattering, absorption, spontaneous and stimulated emission b. Reconstruction of electron energy structure c. Radiative and non-radiative transitions 4.Real structure of fluoride glasses 5.Applications – advantages and disadvantages (drawbacks)
3
What is it? Fluoride glasses can be formed by total replacement of oxygen atoms in oxide glasses by fluorine atoms They are manufactured by melting of high purity single element fluorides mixture
4
HEISENBERG’S UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE E~2·10 -19 eV t~1h E~10 eV t~10 -15 s FREE ATOM SOLID ENERGY
5
Energy diagram showing two atoms encountering and resulting in a new molecule
6
DIELECTRICS VALENCE BAND FORBIDDEN BAND (ENERGY GAP) CONDUCTION BAND ENERGY E g > 2 eV EMPTY FULL EFEF
7
DOPED DIELECTRICS VALENCE BAND CONDUCTION BAND (EMPTY) DOPED IONS LEVELS USED IN LASER ACTION FOR INSTANCE RARE EARTH ELEMENTS IN GLASSES
8
http://www.gel.ulaval.ca/~copgel/conferences/edfa1/tsld001.htm RARE EARTH IONS IN CRYSTALS AND GLASSES
12
TABLE 1. CONVERSION FACTORS FOR ENERGY UNITS Unitjoule electron voltcm –1 joule1 6.24 × 10 18 5.034 × 10 22 electron volt 1.602 × 10 –19 18065.73 cm –1 1.9864 × 10 –23 1.24 × 10 –4 1
13
EXAMPLE : CONVERSION OF ENERGY IN JOULES TO CM -1 Given: A HeNe laser photon has a wavelength of 632.8 nanometers Find: (a) Photon energy in joules (b) Photon energy in cm –1 Solution :
14
THE INTERACTION OF RADIATION WITH MATTER Small no. of states -almost transparent Large no. of states -strongly absorbed Energy X-rays Ultraviolet Visible Infrared Microwaves Ionisation energy Rotation Vibration Electronic level changes Phototionisation Scattering
15
ATOM MUST RETURN FROM EXCITED STATE TO GROUND STATE. HOW?
16
SEVERAL WAYS TO RETURN TO GROUND STATE
17
QUANTUM YIELD OF LUMINESCENCE
18
SEVERAL WAYS TO RETURN TO GROUND STATE. LIFETIMES
19
FLUORESCENCE VERSUS PHOSPHORESCENCE
20
Spin multiplicity A state can be specified by its spin multiplicity (2S+1). No. unpaired electrons SMultiplicityState 0 S = 0 2S + 1 = 1singlet 1 S = 1/22S + 1 = 2doublet 2 S = 12S + 1 = 3triplet 3 S = 3/22S + 1 = 4quartet S 0 ground state singlet S 1, S 2 ……excited state singlets T 1, T 2 ….…excited state triplets SYMBOLS USED IN ATOMIC PHYSICS
21
Pr Eu Ho Er Tm Wavelength [nm] Wavenumber [cm -1 ] Absorbance REE ABSORPTION SPECTRA IN FLUORIDE GLASSES
22
EACH ABSORPTION LINE CORRESPONDS TO THE RESPECTIVE ELECTRON TRANSITION BETWEEN TWO ENERGY LEVELS (GROUND STATE AND EXCITED STATE) WE ARE ABLE TO RECONSTRUCT THE ELECTRON ENERGY STRUCTURE ON THE BASE OF ABSORPTION SPECTRA
23
Pr Eu Ho Er Tm RECONSTRUCTED ELECTRON ENERGY LEVELS IN FLUOROINDATE GLASSES Energy [cm -1 ]
24
SPONTANEOUS EMISSION
25
E3E3 E2E2 E1E1 P ij = P ji P 23 > P 13 >> P 12 INVERSION N 2 >> N 1 2 >> 3 THREE-LEVEL LASER (TRANSITION PROBABILITIES AND LIFETIMES)
26
STIMULATED EMISSION
27
Stimulated Emission Stimulated emission is the exact analogue of absorption. An excited species interacts with the oscillating electric field and gives up its energy to the incident radiation. Emission of Radiation Stimulated emission is an essential part of laser action. UU LL h LL h UU 2h
28
LIFETIMES OF EXCITED STATES
29
FOUR-LEVEL LASER (Cr 3+ doped ruby)
30
E3E3 E2E2 E1E1 E = h· = E 2 – E 1 THREE-LEVEL LASER (quantum amplifier) OPTICAL PUMPING 10 -8 s 10 -3 s
31
Time-schedule of laser action
32
To amplify number of photons going through the atoms we need more atoms in upper energy level than in lower. Amplification or loss is just N upper -N lower. N upper > N lower, more out than in N upper < N lower, fewer out than in
33
PRINCIPLE OF LASER ACTION
34
NUMBER OF PHOTONS ~ 2 N (N – ACTIVE ELEMENT CONTENT)
35
LASER RESONANCE SYSTEM
36
First commercial fluoride glass – about 1990 FLUOROZIRCONATE GLASS ZrF 4 -BaF 2 -LaF 3 -AlF 3 -NaF Acronym - ZBLAN FLUOROINDATE GLASS InF 3 -ZnF 2 -BaF 2 -SrF 2 -GaF 3 -NaF Acronym - IZBSGN 1974 - Marcel & Michel Poulain and Jacques Lucas discovered first fluoride glass (Univ. Rennes, France) HISTORY Accidentally !!!
37
ADVANTAGES 1.Low phonon energy 2.Low absorption in IR range 3.Wide transmission band 4.High refraction index
38
Comparison of various glasses properties to those of silica glasses
39
A PIECE OF PHYSICS Phonons in a lattice Acoustic branch-wide frequency band Optical branch - almost constant frequency THIS FREQUENCY IS MUCH LOWER IN FLUORIDE GLASSES THAN IN SILICA GLASSES IR light absorbtion in fluoride glasses is much lower than in silica glasses
40
VIBRATIONS OF DIATOMIC CHAIN – OPTICAL PHONONS
41
Equation of motion (Newton’s second principle) Disperssion relations
44
Wavelength TRANSMISSION BAND FLUOROZIRCONATE GLASSES SILICA GLASSES FLUOROINDATE GLASSES
45
Wavelength [ m] Wavenumber [cm -1 ] Transmission[%] TRANSMISSION BAND – FLUOROINDATE GLASS 0 100
46
Pr Eu Ho Er Tm ELECTRON ENERGY LEVELS Energy [cm -1 ]
47
Wavenumber [cm -1 ] Wavelength [nm] Luminescence intensity [a.u.] LUMINESCENCE (IZBSGN) Ho 0.5 % mol. 6 % mol. 0.5 % mol. E [cm -1 ] 6 % mol. EMISSION
48
E [cm -1 ]0.5 % mol EMISSION (IZBSGN) Ho
49
Wavenumber [cm -1 ] Wavelength [nm] Luminescence intensity [a.u.] LUMINESCENCE (IZBSGN) Pr EMISSION
50
E [cm -1 ] EMISSION (IZBSGN) Pr
51
Wavenumber [cm -1 ] Wavelength [nm] Luminescence intensity [a.u.] LUMINESCENCE (IZBSGN) Er EMISSION
52
E [cm -1 ] Er EMISSION (IZBSGN)
53
Wavenumber [cm -1 ] Luminescence intensity [a.u.] Intensywność luminescencji [j.wzgl.] LUMINESCENCE (IZBSGN) Tm Tm + Tb EMISSION
54
EMISSION (IZBSGN) Tm E [cm -1 ]
55
EMISSION (IZBSGN) Tm - Tb
57
useless
58
Lifetime [ms] Dopant Level Concentr. [%mol] Experimental m Computed rad Quantum efficiency = m / rad [%] 0.5 0.012 36.4 LIFETIMES & QUANTUM YIELDS OF DOPED FLUOROINDATE GLASSES
59
DISADVANTAGES (DRAWBACKS) 1.Substrates are hygroscopic (built-in OH groups result in additional absorption band in IR range) 2.Difference of T X and T g is low ( 100 0 C) 3.Crystallization susceptibility is high
60
T g – glass transformation temperature T X – crystallization temperature (beginning) T P - crystallization temperature (peak) T = T x – T g HRUBY PARAMETER H = (T X – T G ) / T G SAAD PARAMETER : S = [(T X – T G ) (T P – T X )] / T G PARAMETERS OF STABILITY
61
Various dopants in fluoride glass CHARACTERISTIC TEMPERATURES OF FLUORINDATE GLASSES
62
GLOVE DRY PREPARATION BOX
63
GLOVE DRY MELTING BOX
64
Pr 3+ doped fluoroindate glass
65
REVERSE MONTE CARLO MODELLING (RMC) RIETVELD MODELLING STRUCTURE OF FLUORIDE GLASSES
66
VARIATION OF GIBBS FREE ENERGY DURING VITRIFICATION AND CRYSTALLIZATION liquid Overcooled liquid glass Single crystal Stable glass Range of structural order
67
STRUCTURE OF FLUOROZIRCONATE GLASS (ZBLAN) POULAIN & LUCAS 1974
68
PROJECTION OF THE RMC CUBIC BOX SHOWING THE 300 [MF 6 ] POLYHEDRA NETWORK. EXAMPLE OF RMC MODELLING (NaPbM 2 F 9 )
69
NaPbFe 2 F 9 [MF 6 ] octahedra are in blue; Na atoms in green and Pb atoms in red
70
Five [MF 6 ] polyhedra linked by edges as found in the RMC model NaPbM 2 F 9
71
EXPERIMENTAL VERIFICATION BY NEUTRON DIFFRACTION OR LOW ANGLE X-RAY SCATTERING
72
SiO 2 - crystalline I coordination zone – 3 at II coordination zone – 3 at III coordination zone – 6 at SiO 2 - amorphous I coordination zone – 3 at II coordination zone – 4 at III coordination zone – 4 at EXAMPLE
73
LEAST SQUARES FIT TO EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS (NEUTRON DIFFRACTION AND X-RAY SCATTERING) NaPbM 2 F 9 : neutron data for M = Fe
74
neutron data for M = V LEAST SQUARES FIT TO EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS (NEUTRON DIFFRACTION AND X-RAY SCATTERING) NaPbM 2 F 9 (M = Fe, V)
75
X-ray data for M = Fe LEAST SQUARES FIT TO EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS (NEUTRON DIFFRACTION AND X-RAY SCATTERING) NaPbM 2 F 9 (M = Fe, V)
76
REFERENCES http://www.studsvik.uu.se/Software/RMC/mcgr.htm http://tigger.phy.bris.ac.uk/~liqwww/links.html http://www.cristal.org/glasses/glassvir.html http://www.cis.tugraz.at/ptc/specmag/struct/s.htm http://www.materials.leeds.ac.uk/Groups/Photonics/photonic.htm http://www.gel.ulaval.ca/~copgel/conferences/edfa1/sld001.htm http://irfibers.rutgers.edu/ir_rev_intro.html http://www.mete.metu.edu.tr/PEOPLE/FACULTY/aydinol/gfa/sld001.htm
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.