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Spectroscopy for Materials Characterization


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states is:

      where ω is the frequency of the transition n s m s .

      For the luminescence transition, the similarity law also applies: the overall spectrum is a series of replicas of the vibronic bands L vib(ω, T) spaced apart by −λΩ (λ = 0,1,2, …) from the electronic transition:

      images and images describe the spectral shape of a single defect and are therefore referred to as a homogeneous property.

      We note that, when the thermal excitation of the localized vibrations is taken into account (kT ∼ ℏΩ, λ≥0), two substantial differences emerge: the replicas L vib(ω, T) appear in the anti‐Stokes region of the spectrum and the factor images is replaced by a thermally averaged one. In this case, since the localized vibrational states with λ > 0 contribute to the spectrum, both absorption and luminescence bands widen with increasing temperature. Given a single localized mode of frequency Ω linearly coupled with the electronic transition (Huang–Rhys factor images), the width of the optical band, measured as FWHM, is given by:

      (2.53)equation

      2.1.6 Inhomogeneous Effects

      A completely different framework is represented by amorphous solids where, due to the disordered network, each defect is surrounded by a different local environment; this site‐to‐site nonequivalence results in inhomogeneous effects on the spectral features [10, 11]. In the simplest approximation, it is assumed that inhomogeneous fluctuations cause an energy shift of the homogeneous spectrum as a whole without any changes in its shape, whereas the other spectroscopic parameters (transition probability, phonon energy, …) remain constant. In this case, it is convenient to introduce a one‐dimensional inhomogeneous distribution function w inh(E 00), so that w inh(E 00E represents the fraction of defects having their ZPL in the energy interval ΔE around E 00. The inhomogeneous distribution is usually described by a bell‐shaped Gaussian function:

      Because of the inhomogeneity effects, the vibronic spectral features are smeared out; then, the whole optical band appears to be structureless and its total width is determined by the different weights of homogeneous and inhomogeneous broadening mechanisms.

      

      2.2.1 Time‐Resolved Luminescence

Schematic illustration of the absorption and luminescence of a sample of thickness d. I0 is the incident intensity, Itr(Eexc) is the transmitted intensity, and Ilum(Eexc, Eem, T) is the emitted luminescence intensity.