Chemical processes involving low temperature hydrothermal treatment of pH 4, 7 and 10 solutions of Gd(Tm)-nitrates or chlorides and NH4VO3 result in the formation of crystalline nanorods, nanotubes, nanoribbons, nanospindles and 3D micro- or nanoparticles of Tm-doped zircon-type GdVO4. The relationship between these morphologies and both the structure of the V5+-precursor in the solution, which depends on the pH, and the hydrothermal treatment has been established. The prepared Tm-GdVO4 shows excitation (3H6 → 3H4) and photoluminescence (3F4 → 3H6) spectra of Tm3+ involved in the ∼1.85 to 2.05 μm laser emission similar to those in single crystals. Room temperature luminescence decays of these excited states exhibit single exponential dynamics for 3F4 in the lowest Tm3+-doped materials, and mostly nonexponential behavior for 3H4 and 3F4 in Tm3+ concentrated samples, which has been analytically reproduced by the sum of two exponential regimes ascribed to the different rates of nonradiative relaxations in defects at the surface and in the core of the nanocrystals. 3H4 and 3F4 fluorescence lifetimes evolve in the sequence τpH10 < τpH4 < τpH7, and highest values τ (3H4) = 155 μs and τ (3F4) = 990 μs for 0.2 at% Tm3+ materials are very close to the radiative lifetimes for Tm3+ in the GdVO4 crystal, τRAD = 174 μs and τRAD = 1036 μs, respectively.
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