| Literature DB >> 29563524 |
Xiaoguang Ma1,2, Xiaoyu Li1, Jianqiang Li3,4, Cécile Genevois5, Bingqian Ma1, Auriane Etienne6, Chunlei Wan7, Emmanuel Véron5, Zhijian Peng2, Mathieu Allix8.
Abstract
Transparent crystalline yttrium aluminum garnet (YAG; Y3Al5O12) is a dominant host material used in phosphors, scintillators, and solid state lasers. However, YAG single crystals and transparent ceramics face several technological limitations including complex, time-consuming, and costly synthetic approaches. Here we report facile elaboration of transparent YAG-based ceramics by pressureless nano-crystallization of Y2O3-Al2O3 bulk glasses. The resulting ceramics present a nanostructuration composed of YAG nanocrystals (77 wt%) separated by small Al2O3 crystalline domains (23 wt%). The hardness of these YAG-Al2O3 nanoceramics is 10% higher than that of YAG single crystals. When doped by Ce3+, the YAG-Al2O3 ceramics show a 87.5% quantum efficiency. The combination of these mechanical and optical properties, coupled with their simple, economical, and innovative preparation method, could drive the development of technologically relevant materials with potential applications in wide optical fields such as scintillators, lenses, gem stones, and phosphor converters in high-power white-light LED and laser diode.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29563524 PMCID: PMC5862837 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-03467-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Transparent YAG-Al2O3 composite nanoceramics. a Bright field TEM micrograph showing the nanometer-scale microstructure of the fully crystallized material (scale bar corresponds to 100 nm). The selected area electron diffraction pattern shows the crystallinity of the sample with both YAG and Al2O3 reflections. The size distribution with standard deviation (σ) of the YAG crystals is also embedded. b X-ray diffraction of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic crystallized from a 26 Y2O3–74 Al2O3 glass via a simple 2 h heat treatment at 1100 ℃ in air. The Rietveld refinement leads to a 79±2 wt% content of YAG (21±2 wt% of γ-Al2O3). c HRTEM micrograph of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic showing the presence of two crystalline phases: thin Al2O3 areas surrounding YAG nanograins sharing grain boundaries (scale bar corresponds to 20 nm). The related FFT patterns are embedded. d Transmission spectra in UV–VIS–NIR and MIR region of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic measured through a 1.5 mm thick sample. The dashed gray line corresponds to the theoretical maximum transmission of YAG[53] (the refractive index of YAG single crystal and YAG-Al2O3 ceramic at 589 nm is 1.82 and 1.77, respectively). The photograph of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic sample (diameter = 4.5 mm) placed 2 cm above the text is embedded
Fig. 2Crystallization process of the AY26 glass precursor into YAG-Al2O3 composite nanoceramics. a Differential scanning calorimetry measurement of the AY26 glass precursor showing the glass transition at 887±1 °C and a strong exothermic peak corresponding to crystallization of both YAG and δ-Al2O3 phases at 931±1 °C followed by two broad exothermic peaks corresponding to the δ-Al2O3 → θ-Al2O3 (Tonset = 1061 °C; Tpeak = 1164 °C) and θ-Al2O3 → α-Al2O3 (Tonset = 1292 °C; Tpeak = 1329 °C) transitions. b Evolution of the YAG and Al2O3 polymorphs contents versus treatment (left vertical axis). The evolution of the crystallite size (right vertical axis) versus temperature is also presented. c In situ X-ray powder diffractograms collected upon heating from the AY26 glass powder sample. The indexation corresponds to the YAG garnet structure (PDF 70-7794). d Enlargement showing the Al2O3 structural evolution
Fig. 3TEM study of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic nanostructure. a STEM-HAADF image of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic showing an interconnected 3-D network of the YAG crystals (bright phase) separated by Al2O3 areas (dark phase). The scale bar corresponds to 50 nm. b HRTEM micrograph of the same YAG-Al2O3 ceramic showing a typical coalescence neck between two particles (YAG 1 and YAG 2) oriented along the and the zones axes respectively (scale bar corresponds to 10 nm). The micrograph and the FFT patterns embedded show that the plans of the two grains are almost parallel (small rotation deviation of 6°). STEM-EDX cationic c composition profile and d elemental maps showing that the bright phase observed by STEM-HAADF (scale bar corresponds to 25 nm) can be assigned to YAG and the dark phase to Al2O3
Fig. 4Mechanical and optical properties of the YAG-Al2O3 nanoceramic. a Typical load-displacement curves of the AY26 ceramic synthesized at 1100 °C and compared to commercial micrometer scale YAG transparent ceramic and YAG single crystal. The indentation morphology of the AY26 ceramic is embedded. b Photoluminescence excitation and emission spectra of the Ce3+-doped YAG-Al2O3 ceramic. The dotted line is the excitation spectrum; the red and green lines are the photoluminescence emission spectra under excitation at 460 and 340 nm, respectively. The photograph of the ceramic sample recorded under 460 nm laser excitation (4 mW power) and its energy levels diagram are embedded. c Color coordinates of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic under 460 nm LED excitation for various thicknesses (from 0.5 to 1.1 mm) and Ce3+ doping contents (from 0.1 at% to 2 at%). The curved line corresponds to the Planckian black-body locus. d Photograph of the YAG-Al2O3 ceramic-based WLED under a driving current of 60 mA. The photograph of the ceramic sample (0.1 at% Ce3+) is embedded