First-principles study of Ce-doped Y3Al5O12 with Si–N incorporation: electronic structures and optical properties†
Abstract
Incorporation of Si–N into Ce-doped Y3Al5O12 (YAG:Ce) has previously been shown to give distinct lower-energy emission but with stronger thermal quenching than the typical yellow YAG:Ce emission. Here, we investigate geometric and electronic structures of Ce and Si–N co-doped YAG with first-principles methods, to gain microscopic insight into effects of Si–N addition on electronic structures and optical properties of Ce3+. Hybrid density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that the Si–N prefers to be substituted for the tetrahedral Al(tet)–O sites with a random distribution, among which the nearest-neighbor (NN) SiAl(tet)–NO substitutions with the NO coordinated to Ce3+ result in a slight upward shift of the 4f1 ground-state level with respect to the host valence band. Wave function-based CASSCF/CASPT2 calculations at the spin–orbit level show that the NN SiAl(tet)–NO substitutions induce a redshift of the lowest energy Ce3+ 4f(1) → 5d(1) transition, in agreement with experimental observations. The redshift originates from an increase in the 5d crystal field splitting and a decrease in the 5d centroid energy of Ce3+ in comparable magnitude. Combining these results, we find that the energy separation between the lowest Ce3+ 5d(1) level and the host conduction band minimum (CBM) remains largely unchanged upon the NN SiAl(tet)–NO substitution, thus excluding the thermal ionization of the 5d electron as the underlying mechanism for the temperature quenching of the lower-energy Ce3+ emission. This finding also suggests that the thermally activated crossover from the 5d(1) to the 4f1 states could be responsible for the luminescence quenching, which is also consistent with present calculated results.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2016 Journal of Materials Chemistry C Hot Papers