Abstract
Nonradiative decay of excited rare-earth ions by multiphonon emission has been investigated in a series of oxide glasses. Various rare-earth electronic levels were selectively excited by short-duration laser pulses and multiphonon relaxation rates were determined from measurements of fluorescence rise and decay times. Time resolution for fluorescence measurements was 3 nsec, so excited states were probed for which the decay was predominantly nonradiative. Excited states of , , and with energy gaps to the next-lower state ranging from 1300 to 4700 were studied. The multiphonon relaxation rates for each glass investigated exhibited an approximately exponential dependence on energy gap. Evidence of breakdown of this dependence was observed in the region of small energy gaps. The measured temperature dependences of the decay rates establish that the relaxation occurs predominantly by excitation of the highest-frequency vibrations associated with stretching modes of the glass network former. Borate, silicate, phosphate, germanate, and tellurite glasses were studied. From Raman spectra, the highest-frequency vibrations for these glasses ranged from 700 to 1400 . The corresponding multiphonon relaxation rates for a given energy gap differed by three orders of magnitude. The strength of the ion-phonon coupling was found to be approximately equal for all glasses.
- Received 14 December 1976
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.16.10
©1977 American Physical Society