Erbium ions in congruent and stoichiometric lithium niobate. Searching for a clue

POSTER

Abstract

Lithium Niobate (LN) doped with Er$^{3+}$ ions is of great interest for both fundamental science and advanced applications: lasers with frequency conversion, elements of all-optical telecommunication network and quantum cryptography. According to the EXAFS and RBS data, trivalent ions substitute for Li$^{+}$ and should create similar centers with charge compensation by lithium vacancies. The EPR studies confirmed this conclusion for Cr, Fe, Nd, and Yb Their most intense lines belong to axial centers with C$_{3}$ symmetry. Distant lithium vacancies cause a line broadening, but do not change the C$_{3}$ symmetry of observed spectra. Our EPR study of Er$^{3+}$ in stoichiometric LN has unexpectedly shown that all observed Er$^{3+}$ centers have C$_{1}$ symmetry. Therefore, models with cation vacancies cannot describe our experimental data for LN:Er, and we have to consider complexes which excludes the existence of axial centers: erbium substituted for lithium or incorporated in octahedral or tetrahedral structural vacancy plus interstitial oxygen ion as a charge compensator, erbium substituted for niobium and oxygen vacancy as compensator of excessive negative charges. Re-investigating congruent samples of LN:Er, we did not find undisputable evidences of the existence of axial Er$^{3+}$ centers.

Authors

  • Ian Vrable

    Montana State University

  • Valentin Grachev

    Montana State University

  • A. Knecht

    Oregon State University, University of Idaho, Department of Chemistry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, School of EECS, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, Oregon Health and Science University, Linfield College, Purdue University, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Montana State University, University of British Columbia, University of Washington, Cornell University, Philipps-University, 35032 Marburg, Germany, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, Physics Department, SUNY Binghamton, Physics Department, Oregon State University, Argonne National Laboratory

  • Edward Kokanyan

    Institute for Physical Researches, Ashtarak, Armenia

  • Galina Malovichko

    Montana State Universtiy, Montana State University