Abstract
Stoichiometric rare-earth materials have demonstrated extremely narrow inhomogeneous photoluminescence-excitation linewidths because the rare-earth cations occupy uniform crystallographic sites. These narrow linewidths make them strong candidates for quantum information storage by providing access to transitions with extremely long coherence times, on the order of hours. Determining the chemical origins of defects that may broaden linewidths and reduce performance is an important step toward exploiting stoichiometric systems' advantages. Here we present EuAl3(BO3)4 as a system for defect-performance correlation studies since it can be grown as optically transparent single crystals and has a large Eu--Eu separation. Large crystals grown from two flux systems incorporate percent-level substitutions of flux cations. Additionally, the material's three polytypic modifications, including the newly detailed C2/c space group polymorph, can coexist within single crystals. The sharply divided polymorph domains are revealed by photoluminescence mapping. Polymorph domains are also present in EuAl3(BO3)4 samples produced flux-free by microwave-assisted sintering in only 45 min. We anticipate that these mapping studies will be a crucial step in the quest to identify local heterogeneity (substitutions, polymorphs, strain, etc.) in the next generation of quantum information storage materials.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Figures and tables provided as supporting information to and referenced in the main text:
Figure S1. Powder XRD pattern of synthesized K2Mo3O10;
Figure S2. Map of the 5D0→7F1 transition for an additional crystal;
Figure S3. Map of the 5D0→7F0 transition for the crystal from Figure S2;
Figure S4. Powder XRD pattern of EuAl3(BO3)4 heated above its melting point;
Table S1. Refined C2/c polymorph atomic positions;
Table S2. Comparison of C2/c polymorph peaks to proposed EuAl3(BO3)4 phase with Eu/Al site mixing;
Table S3. R32 polymorph single crystal data;
Table S4. Refined R32 polymorph atomic positions
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