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Investigation of the Solid-Solution Limit, Crystal Structure, and Thermal Quenching Mitigation of Sr-Substituted Rb 2 CaP 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ Phosphors for White LED Applications.

Kai ZhaoLi YinZhihong MaTingxuan YangHuidong TangPeng CaoSaifang Huang
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2022)
Rb 2 CaP 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ is a bright reddish-orange-emitting phosphor, but its luminescence thermal stability is poor. In this study, we investigated the solid-solution limit and thermal quenching mitigation of Rb 2 CaP 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ phosphors by cation substitution with Sr 2+ and revisited their crystal structure. First, we carefully investigated the solid solution limit of Sr in the structure of Rb 2 CaP 2 O 7 . The results show that up to 80% of Ca can be substituted by Sr, whereas Ca hardly resides in the structure of Rb 2 SrP 2 O 7 . Consequently, the photoluminescence was fine-tuned from reddish-orange (612 nm) to yellow (580 nm) light emission by increasing the Sr 2+ concentration in the solid-solution phosphors Rb 2 Sr 1- x Ca x P 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ under excitation at 342 nm. The mechanism for the blue shift of the emission spectrum was discussed. With the associated modification of the local environment of the activator (as reflected by the changes in the effective coordination number, average bond length, distortion index, and quadratic elongation), the luminescence thermal quenching issue of Rb 2 CaP 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ was mitigated by substituting 20% Sr into the Ca site (Rb 2 Ca 0.8 Sr 0.2 P 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ ). The integrated intensity of bright orange-emitting Rb 2 Ca 0.8 Sr 0.2 P 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ (603 nm) at 150 °C retained 53% of its initial value, 1.64 times that of Rb 2 CaP 2 O 7 :Eu 2+ (32.3%). Such an enhancement could be attributed to the improved rigidity of the crystal structure due to the local structure modification as evidenced by Rietveld refinement. The cation substitution is an effective approach for mitigating the thermal quenching issue of phosphors.
Keyphrases
  • light emitting
  • energy transfer
  • crystal structure
  • quantum dots
  • photodynamic therapy
  • air pollution
  • climate change
  • molecular docking
  • solid state
  • immune response
  • high intensity
  • atomic force microscopy