53
Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part

Weiwen Zou

May 16,2003

Page 2: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

2

My view on the research

• 1. Microscopic changes: In different non-stoichiometric crystals without or with different doping concentration– Defects (Intrinsic and extrinsic)

– Impurity levels in the gap of crystal

– Which location in lattice

– …

• 2. Macroscopic performances (change):

• The gating ratio

• Absorption change

• Sensitivity

• M#(M number)

• Dynamic range

• Dark decay

• Optical quality

• …..

Page 3: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

3

Outline• The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

– A common nonlinear optical effect

– The photorefractive effect

– Two wave mixing

– Holography

– Applications of photorefractive materials

• One-color holography Vs. two-color holography– One-color holography

– Two-color holography

– Analogy

• LiNbO3 for the two-color holography– Crystal growth and congruent melting

– Nonstoichiometry and stoichiometry

– LiNbO3 and its defects

– Charge transport models

Page 4: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

4

Outline• The performance change of the crystal due to doping

– Defect changes due to varying dopants

– Intrinsic defects

– Extrinsic defects

– Relative sequence

• Next plan– Experiments of two-color holography (part II)

• The two-color holography’s parameters

• Determination methods and the corresponding precautions for them

• Setup of the experiment

• Doubly doped by Manganese(Mn) and Iron (Fe) (Nature,1998)

• Doped by Indium (In)

• Doped by Magnesium (Mg)

Page 5: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

5

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

A common nonlinear optical effect

The photorefractive effect

• Two wave mixing

• Holography

• Applications of photorefractive materials

Page 6: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

6

A traditional nonlinear optical effect

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

Linear optics: the polarization in a medium is linear with the illuminated optical field. In other word, the susceptibility is independent with the optical field.

P=ε0χ(1)E

A traditional nonlinear optical effect: it can be described by a nonlinear susceptibility which is dependent with the optical field.

P=ε0χ(1)E+ε0χ

(2)E2+ε0χ(3)E3+⋅⋅⋅

P : The polarization of the medium

E : The optical field

: Absolute Electric constant

: The linear susceptibility of the medium

: The different order nonlinear susceptibility.

ε0χ1

χ (n)

Page 7: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

7

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

The photorefractive effect

• Definition: The photorefractive effect is the change in refractive index of an optical material that results from the optically induced distribution of carriers in the material, such as electrons and holes etc.

• Characteristics: It is quite different from the other nonlinear optical effect above. The reason is that, under a wide range of conditions, the change in refractive index in steady state is independent of the intensity (or optical field) of the light that induces the change.

• Mechanism: (See the figure of next page)

Page 8: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

8

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

Mechanism

Ferroelectric Crystal

(+dopants)Congruent

meltingX’tal(:dopa

nt)

Laser illuminating

Impurity or defect is excited and

begins to diffuse or drift

Dynamic Equilibrium

State

Space-charge Electric field

ESC

Defects or impurities

Due to the electrooptic effect in X’tal

The refractive index has been changed by the E-O principle. n->n’

This is the crystal’ certain nonlinear

performance named as photorefractive

effect

Page 9: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

9

The space charge field is formed by the redistribution of the carriers induced by the illuminating light

Due to the linear Electro-optical effect in the material, the

refractive index variation

The phase relationship among the interfering beams (1), the charge density (2) and the space charge field (3):

ϕ3 =ϕ2±π2=ϕ1±

π2

The coherent beams interfere to form the distribution of intensity

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

The carriers redistribute under the light illumination

Page 10: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

10

Two-wave mixing(two-beam coupling)

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

LiNbO3

Bragg grating

Two beams are incident on the crystal.

Due to the photorefractive effect in the crystal, a Bragg grating is formed.

Because the grating is formed by those 2 beams, each of them satisfies the Bragg condition and is diffracted by the grating.

This is so-called two-wave mixing or two-beam coupling.

Note: It exists by other nonlinear effects such as Stimulated Brillioun Scatting (BRS)...

Page 11: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

11

Holography(Writing)

Laser beams

Lion: one object

Object beams

Reference beams

Mirror

LiNbO3:Photosensitive medium

Hologram

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

Page 12: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

12

Holography(Reading)

Diffracted beams

Note: The reference beams should satisfy the so-called Bragg condition.

The concise introduction of photorefractive effect

Hologram

Reference beams

Page 13: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

13

One-color holography Vs. two-color holography

• One-color holography

• Two-color holography

• Analogy

Page 14: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

14

One-color Holography(physics)

Note: All of these figures ©IBM

One-color Vs. two-color

Page 15: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

15

Characters of one-color holography

• Advantage – Easy to erase

– Mechanical stability

– Recording reversibility

• Disadvantage– The reversibility makes the holograms volatile, so that they can be

easily erased during the process of reading the recorded information.

• The reason : the reading process is that the hologram is due to the space-charge field which is induced by the space-charge redistribution stimulated by the interference between the object and reference beam both of which has the same wavelength. So if one reading beam is incident on the crystal, electrons trapped to form the space charge will be excited uniformly to erase the hologram.

One-color Vs. two-color

Page 16: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

16

The ways to solve the disadvantage

• Thermal fixing

• Electrical fixing

• Two-wavelength fixing (2-color holography or “photo-

gated” recording)

One-color Vs. two-color

Page 17: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

17

Thermal fixing

• Mechanism(copy the space-charge pattern into a pattern of immobile ions):

A copy of the stored index gratings is made by thermally activating proton diffusion, which creates an optically stable complementary proton grating to store the hologram.

• Disadvantages– Long time for fixing– Not easy for erosion.

One-color Vs. two-color

Page 18: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

18

Electrical fixing

• Mechanism(copy space-charge pattern into felloelectric domains)

• Disadvantage– Not easy for erosion.

One-color Vs. two-color

Page 19: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

19

Two-color holography

One-color Vs. two-color

Ref. :Adibi et al.,J.Opt.Soc.Am.B, 18, 584-601 (1997)

Page 20: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

20

Two-color holography

One-color Vs. two-color

Conduction band (C.B.)

Valence band (V.B.)

Deep level

Shape levelGate photon

WritingPhoton

Valence band (V.B.)

Conduction band (C.B.)

Deep level

Shape level

Gate photon

WritingPhoton

Carrier: Electron Carrier: Hole

Page 21: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

21

Two-color holographyA shorter light (gating) excites the carriers from the deep level, which tend to be trapped at the shape level. Then the small polaron formed is sensitive to infrared light but is metastable at room temperature.(long dark decay.)

If coherent inhomogeneous beams (writing) incident, they write the holograms as the spatial distribution of filled shallow centers(PR effect). Due to be unstable(dark decay), the electrons at shallow centers will be transferred to that at deep centers, so the hologram is recorded in the deep level too.

One-color Vs. two-color

While readout photon (with the same wavelength of writing and satisfying the Bragg condition) is not enough to excite electrons from the deep level to the Conduction band. Therefore, there holograms by this means are stable and nonvolatile.

Conduction band

Valence band

Deep levelX X+

Shallow levelK+ K

e-

e-

e- e-

e- e- e-

e-e-

Gate photonWritingPhoton

Page 22: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

22

Vs.

One-color Vs. two-color

Note: All of these figures ©IBM

Page 23: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

23

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

• Crystal growth and congruent melting

• Non-stoichiometry vs. stoichiometry

• LiNbO3 intrinsic defects

• Charge transport models

Page 24: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

24

Crystal growth

• Congruent melting

• Reduction treatment: heat treatment in an oxygen-poor atmosphere

• Doped with other transient (damage-resistant) elements

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Page 25: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

25

Rough sketch of lithium nibote

Copyright: crystaltechnology

Copyright: crystaltechnology

Page 26: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

26

LiNbO3 and its structure

Lithium

Oxygen

Niobium

1. Li+ and Nb5+ have nearly identical ionic radii.

2. The environments of them are similar. Both ions are surrouded by distorted octahedra of six O2- ions.

3. Nb5+ - O2- is stronger than Li+ - O2-

Results: Lithium Niobate has a tendency to non-stoichiometry with

Li/Nb<1 (usually 48.6:51.4).

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Page 27: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

27

Stoichiometry Non-stoichiometryVs.

Usually, congruently melted LiNbO3 crystal is always a non-stoichiometric one, which means

[Li+][Li+]+[Nb5+]

=48.6mol%<50%

The formulation for it can be rewritten as Li1−xNb1+x/ 5O3 [Li1−xNbx /5+y][Nb1−y]O3or

However, other ways can form the stoichiometric crystal. For example, before melting the concentration of Lithium can be much more than that of Niobium.

Page 28: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

28

NbLi5+

Intrinsic anti-site defects

Postgrowth reduction treatment: A loss of oxygens and the diffusion of the excess Li and Nb5+ ions.

NbLi4+NbNb

4+Bipolaron

-

-

NbLi4+

NbNb4+

That Li/Nb is less than unity makes some Nb ions locate at the Li sites

Intrinsic defects on the congruent melting crystals (without or with reduction treatment)

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Page 29: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

29

Charge transport models

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Reason: Where the free charge carriers come from and where they are trapped is crucial for the holography.

Notes: Independent on the sign of the dominant charge carrier (either electrons or holes) ; dependent on not only the host material, but also light intensity

Function:

It determines macroscopic properties like absorption, absorption changes, conductivity and holographic sensitivity.

Models: One-center model without and with electron-hole competition; two-center model; the three-valence models.

Ref. :K. Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64, 273-291 (1997)

Page 30: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

30

One-center model

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Arrows indicate excitation and recombination of electrons at C-/C0. C can be any defects ions in crystal, such as Fe3+, Nb

Li 5+ and so

Electrons are excited by light or by thermal processes from filled traps C- into the CB

Free electrons recombine from CB with empty traps C0

In fact, one-color holography is based on this model.

Ref. :K. Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64, 273-291 (1997)

Page 31: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

31

Models with electron-hole competition

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Ref: Orlowski and Kratzig , Solid state commun. 14,1978

Ref: Orlowski and Kratzig , Solid state commun. 14,1978

Orlowski and Kratzig demonstrated by beam-couping experiments that simultaneously electrons and holes can be involved in the charge transport.

Their relative contributions to the conductivity depend on the light wavelength and on the oxidizaton-reduction state of the crystal.

This is the straight forward extension of the one-center model.

Thermal and light-induced excitantions of valence band electrons into C0

Recombination of electrons from C- with valence band holes

Ref. :K. Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64, 273-291 (1997)

Page 32: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

32

Two-center model

• In 1983, it was formulated for explanation of grating erasures with two distinct time constants(Thermal generation rates not considered)

• In 1986,based on transient photocurrent measurements, shallow centers => the charge transport

• In 1988, light-induced absorption changes was explained by this model by considering a large thermal generation rate of charge carriers at shallow centers.

• In 1989, this model is applied into the photoconductivity.

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Ref. :K. Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64, 273-291 (1997)

Page 33: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

33

Two-center model

Conduction band

Valence band

Deep levelX X+

Shallow levelK+ K

e-

e-

e- e-

e- e- e-

e-e-

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Without considering the thermal generation rates

X and K are different photorefractive centers, respectively.

Ref. :K. Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64, 273-291 (1997)

Page 34: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

34

Two-center model

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

In fact, two-color holography is based on this model.

Conduction band

Valence band

Deep levelX X+

Shallow levelK+ K

e-

e-

e- e-

e- e- e-

e-e-

Gate photonWritingPhoton

Page 35: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

35

Three-valence model

There is only one center C which can occur in three different valence states, denoted by 0, -1, 2-.

At low light intensities, only C0 and C- are present. (the same as one-center model)

For sufficiently high light intensities, the electron concentration in CB becomes large enough that an appreciable number of electrons recombines with C- and generates C2-. Then C- act as additional traps for C2-

The difference between three-valence model and two-center model:

1. In two-center model, filled deep and shallow traps are coupled only via the density of electrons in CB.

2. In three-valence, there is also an additional coupling due to the relationship of the centers, which is the same element.

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Ref: K.Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64,1997

Ref. :K. Buse, Appl. Phys. B, 64, 273-291 (1997)

Page 36: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

36

Applications

• Production of outstanding interference filters and wavelength demultiplexers (Holographic gratings)

• Construction of volume holographic memories (Holographic gratings)

• Optical detection systems of ultrasonic waves (Non-steady-sate photocurrents)

• Laser-beam clean-up (two-wave mixing)

• Efficient coupling of light from a multimode into a single-mode fiber(Self-pumped phase conjugation)

• Optical computing

• Enhanced detection of phase modulations

• Femtosecond optical storage and processing

LiNbO3 for the two-color holography

Page 37: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

37

The performance change of the crystal due to doping

• Defect Changes due to varying dopants

• Intrinsic defects

• Extrinsic defects

• Relative sequence

Page 38: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

38

Defect changes by the doping procedure

• When a certain element is doped into the non-stoichiometric LN, the impurity ion enters into the sites so that the concentration of the intrinsic defects decrease, which is formed by the non-stoichiometric composition.

If the concentration of the impurity ions exceed the so-called optical-damage threshold value, all the intrinsic defects are almost displaced by the impurities.

It results that the absorption band by the intrinsic defects is shifted owning to the new-formed defects.

The performance change due to doping

Page 39: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

39

The importance of defects

• Deferent configuration (or formulation) of one crystal with different defects will have different holographic performance according to its mechanism.

The performance change due to doping

Page 40: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

40

Intrinsic defects

• O- trapped holes (Cation vacancy)• Nb4+ small polaron (An electron self-trapped at NbNb

5+ orNbLi5+)

• Bipolarons (NbNb4+NbLi

4+ :diamagnetic pairs of electrons trapped at NbNb

5+NbLi5+ complex)

• Oxygen Vacancies (VO)

The performance change due to doping

Page 41: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

41

The performance change due to doping

Extrinsic defects

• Magnesium (Mg)

• Iron(Fe)

• Further extrinsic defects

Page 42: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

42

Cation vacancy: O- trapped holes • Form: by capturing a defect electron(hole) at one of the neighboring O2- ,

local charge compensation can be achieved under ionizing radiation

• Evidence: – ESR(electron spin resonance) of congruent Lithium niobate by two-

photon X- and by e--irradiation. It consists of several overlapping lines, which cannot be disentangled, due to unresolved Li and Nb hyperfine interaction.

– Optical absorption band: peak at 2.5ev (approximate 0.495um). It is caused by the light induced transfer of the hole from its original trapping site to an equivalent O2- ions around the defect (like a small polaron).

– The Dark decay dynamics of the absorption coeffeicent change. (Pro. Tomita’ Group)

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 43: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

43

Cation vacancy: O- trapped holes • Temperature dependence of the X-ray-induced O- coloration:

– In the 50-200 K range, decaying at the same rate as the absorption due to Nb4+, the ioniztion energy of which: 0.54ev

– In 100-200K, using isochronal annealing, optical absorption and ESR decay simultaneously.

– In about 15K, X-irradiation in LN doped with 9% Mg, no trapped holes are formed; with 6% Mg the concentration is rather low.

• In Mg-doped crystal, the electron trapping energy is much less than in undoped crystals. => The Nb4+ electrons recombine with O- at rather low temperature.

• The concentration of cation vacancies rises with decreasing [Li]/[Nb], whereas self-trapping of holes cannot be excluded for high [Li]/[Nb].

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 44: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

44

Small polarons

• Evidence:– A characteristic 10-line pattern by two-photon (2*2.46ev) and X-

irradiation of congruent undoped LN, which is caused by hyperfine interaction with the nucleus of 93Nb (the only stable isotope of Nb)

– In reduced undoped LN after illumination with light of wavelength < 600nm at T<80K, the same ESR was found.

• Before illumination, peak at approximate 2.5ev(500nm) due to bipolarons

• After illumination, 1.6ev (760nm) attributed to small polarons and the low energy party of the band explained by small polaron absoption based on

• Form: an electron self-trapped at a NbLi5+ ion to a free small polaron. (1.6

ev)

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 45: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

45

Bipolarons(Electron pairs trapped at NbLi-NbNb)

• Form: Electron pairs trapped at NbLi-NbNb

• Evidence:– In reduced undoped LN after illumination with light of wavelength <

600nm at T<80K, the same ESR was found.• Before illumination, peak at approximate 2.5ev(500nm) due to bipolarons

• After illumination, 1.6ev (760nm) attributed to small polarons

• The reduced crystal is diamagnetic and no ESR signal accompanying the absorption band =>the absorption at 2.5ev not due to small polarons and oxygen trapped holes

• Characteristics:– Dissociation: By heating or light illumination, a transfer of one of the

paired electrons out of the cluster.

– The efficiency of coloration by reducing ~ the [Li]/[Nb] ratio: raising the ration decreases the coloration. (because only in strongly non-stoichiometric crystals is a sufficient number of sites for electrons trapped after O left the crystal.)

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 46: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

46

Magnesium (Mg)

• General comment: its properties is strongly related to those of the intrinsic defects

• Evidence:– 4.6mol% MgO compared with a lower Mg concentration, the effect for reducing the

optical damage is much strongly.

– A distinct threshold at a critical Mg concentration: [Mg]c>4.5mol%.

– The effect due to the Mg concentration bigger than critical value (not deliberately doped with Fe)

• The optical absorption in reduced crystals (due to intrinsic defects) decreases

• The intensity of X-ray-induced luminescence increases by several orders of magnitude while other related properties, such as width and energy of the band, also change abruptly.

• The absorption edge shows a blueshift

• The X-ray-induced Nb4+ ESR intensity decreases to zero.

– Codoped with Fe and Mg, the photoconductivity increases and the photovoltaic effect is not be effected

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 47: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

47

Magnesium (Mg)

• Similarity: The features for high [Li]/[Nb] are similar to those for low [Li]/[Nb] but with high [Mg] doping.

– All of those experiment results for high [Li]/[Nb] are the same as those of high doping.

– With [Mg] fixed and the ratio of [Li]/[Nb] varying, the threshold for the change of properties is influenced by the ratio.

• Function: For Mg only indirectly influences the behavior of the specimens investigated, the function of Mg doping is to replace the NbLi.

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 48: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

48

Iron (Fe)

• Fe2+ and Fe3+

– Only both the charge states occur in the doped Fe crystal.

– Converted into each other by reduction and oxidation treatments, respectively

– In Both of them, Fe occupies the same type of lattice sites.

– Optical absorption:• Fe2+: 1.1ev (d-d transitions -->Donor state transitions) and 2.6 ev(Fe2+-Nb5+ intervalence

transfer), the latter of which is similar those of trapped hole and bipolaron absorption.

• Fe3+:

• Function:– The photoconductivity: σ p∝ I ⋅

[Fe2+][Fe3+]

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 49: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

49

Relative sequence of defects I

CB

VB

Bipolarons/O- holes

~2.5ev

Small polarons/ Mg2+

~1.6ev

The performance change due to doping

Page 50: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

50

Relative sequence II(impurity levels)

CB

VB

Mn 2+3+

Cu 1+2+

Fe 2+3+

Ti 3+4+

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: O.F.Schirmer et. al.,J.Phys.

Chem.Solids, 52, 185-200 (1991)

Page 51: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

51

Interrelation between intrinsic and extrinsic defects

The performance change due to doping

Ref.: G.Malovichko et.al.Appl. Phys.

B, 68, 785-793 (1997)

Any possible manipulations with dopants induce change in the subsystem of intrinsic defects and, by their common influence cause variations of the properties of LN

Because of the high concentration of intrinsic defects, the conventional congruent crystals are tolerant to impurities substituting for Li or Nb ions

There are different complexes, such as “impurity ion-intrinsic defect” or “impurity-impurity” and so on, due to the variation and the concentration of the dopants

The strong coupling of extrinsic and intrinsic defects is one of the most important features of LN, which is indeed rather flexible and very sensitive to changes in both defects.

Page 52: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

52

Next plan

• Experiments of two-color holography

– The two-color holography’s parameters

– Determination methods and the corresponding precautions for them

– Setup of the experiment

– Doubly doped by Manganese(Mn) and Iron (Fe) (Nature,1998)

– Doped by Indium (In)

– Doped by Magnesium (Mg) (The main topic in our group)

Page 53: Photorefractive effect in LN: Theoretical part Weiwen Zou May 16,2003

53