A single-crystalline defect-less phosphor is desired for efficient luminescence of the therein doped optical activators. In this paper, microsized MgAlO:Mn single-crystal phosphors with bright red luminescence were grown in molten LiCl salt at 950 °C, for application in blue LED pumped white lighting. By comparing the phosphor formation from various Mg- and Al-bearing sources, both the template-formation and the dissolution-diffusion processes were evidenced to account for the formation of the microsized MgAlO:Mn crystallites. Using nano γ-AlO as the Al-bearing precursor, the uniform MgAlO:Mn microcrystallites with a {111} planes-exposed tetragonal bipyramid morphology were obtained. The photoluminescence property was studied at various temperatures, and Mg ↔ Al anti-site disorder induced luminescence broadening was discussed. The Mn E → A transition in MgAlO shows a quite short luminescence wavelength peaking at 651 nm and ultrabroadband emission extending to 850 nm. The luminescence is relatively robust against thermal effect with relatively high thermal quenching temperature of 400 K and activation energy of 0.23 eV. Employing the red-emitting MgAlO:Mn crystallites, blue LED pumped white lighting prototypes were fabricated which simulate the solar-like spectrum and show neutral to warm white.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c03005 | DOI Listing |
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