Enhanced hydrothermal crystallization and color tailorable photoluminescence of hexagonal structured YPO4:Sm/Tb nanorods†
Abstract
Hexagonal structured YPO4:Tb/Sm (h-YPO4:Tb/Sm) nanorods with significantly large aspect ratios of up to ∼32 have been successfully fabricated via hydrothermal crystallization in the presence of sodium malate (Mal2−) and superfluous PO43−. The combined techniques of XRD, SEM, TEM, and PLE/PL were employed to characterize the products, and the formation mechanism of the nanorods was discussed in detail. It was found that Mal2− and superfluous PO43− jointly ensured the crystallization of the metastable hexagonal phase, and the latter promoted the 1D growth of the crystals. The h-(Y0.99−xTb0.01Smx)PO4 ternary phosphors simultaneously displayed the green emission of Tb3+ at 545 nm and the red emission of Sm3+ at 601 nm under 221 nm UV excitation, with which the emission color was finely tuned from green to yellow by increasing the Sm3+ content. The Tb3+ → Sm3+ energy transfer in h-(Y0.99−xTb0.01Smx)PO4 was revealed to occur via an electric dipole–dipole interaction mechanism. The fluorescence lifetime of Tb3+ was found to steadily decrease with increasing Sm3+ concentration, and the efficiency of energy transfer was determined to be ∼31.2% at the optimal Sm3+ content of 4 at% (x = 0.04).