4.6 Article

Mn4+ emission in pyrochlore oxides

Journal

JOURNAL OF LUMINESCENCE
Volume 157, Issue -, Pages 69-73

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jlumin.2014.08.038

Keywords

Red phosphor; Mn4+; Pyrochlore; Fluorescent lighting

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Funding

  1. Critical Materials Institute, an Energy Innovation Hub - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Advanced Manufacturing Office

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Existing Mn4+ activated red phosphors have relatively low emission energies (or long emission wavelengths) and are therefore inefficient for general lighting. Density functional calculations are performed to study Mn4+ emission in rare-earth hafnate, zirconate, and stannate pyrochlore oxides (RE2Hf2O7, RE2Zr2O7, and RE2Sn2O7). The results show how the different sizes of the RE3+ cation in these PYrochlores affect the local structure of the distorted MnO6 octahedron, the Mn-O hybridization, and the Mn4+ emission energy. The Mn4+ emission energies of many pyrochlores are found to be higher than those currently known for Mn4+ doped oxides and should be closer to that of Y2O3:Eu3+ (the current commercial red phosphor for fluorescent lighting). The O-Mn-O bond angle distortion in a MnO6 octahedron is shown to play an important role in weakening Mn-O hybridization and consequently increasing the Mn4+ emission energy. This result shows that searching for materials that allow significant O-Mn-O bond angle distortion in a MnO6 octahedron is an effective approach to find new Mn4+ activated red phosphors with potential to replace the relatively expensive Y2O3:Eu3+ phosphor. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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