Artigo Revisado por pares

Controlled Massively Defective Crystalline Solutions with the Fluorite Structure

1964; Institute of Physics; Volume: 111; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1149/1.2426145

ISSN

1945-7111

Autores

Della M. Roy, Rustum Roy,

Tópico(s)

Inorganic Chemistry and Materials

Resumo

Fluorite‐structure compounds form a rare example of ionic species containing vacancies and interstitials in very high concentrations (up to 50 mole‐%). With the formation of substitutional defects incorporating the "half‐breed" derivatives of the type (Ln = lanthanon and yttrium) the possibility of controlling a whole series of properties of fluorite for applications such as lasers is apparent. Crystalline solubility is extensive in binary systems of the type , , and , and in ternary systems . Unit cell dimension, density, and refractive index measurements confirm the existence of interstitial F− as the major defect in and type structures, while simple substitutional defect structures exist between and . Ternary compositions can show a controlled combination of the two types of defect. Certain of the crystalline solutions have been shown to exhibit photoluminescence and cathodoluminescence.

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