posted on 2023-12-18, 18:35authored byArnoldus
J. van Bunningen, Jur W. de Wit, Sadakazu Wakui, Andries Meijerink
The efficient red-emitting
phosphor K2SiF6:Mn4+ (KSF) is widely
used for low-power LED applications.
The saturated red color and sharp line emission are ideal for application
in backlight LEDs for displays. However, the long excited state lifetime
lowers the external quantum yield (EQY) at high photon flux, limiting
the application in (higher power density) lighting. Here, we report
the synthesis of a new crystalline phase: hexagonal (K,Rb)SiF6:Mn4+ (h-KRSF). Due to the lower local symmetry,
the Mn4+ emission in this new host material shows a pronounced
zero phonon line, which is different from Mn4+ in the cubic
KSF. The lower symmetry reduces the excited state lifetime, and thus,
the loss of EQY under high photon fluxes, and the spectral change
also increases the lumen/W output. Temperature-dependent emission
and lifetime measurements reveal a high luminescence quenching temperature
of ∼500 K, similar to that of KSF. The formation mechanism
of h-KRSF was studied in situ by measuring the emission
spectra of the precipitate in solution over time. Initially, nanocrystalline
cubic KRSF (c-KRSF) is formed, which transforms into a microcrystalline
hexagonal precipitate with a surprising exponential increase in the
transformation rate with time. The stability of the new phase was
studied by temperature-dependent XRD, and an irreversible transition
back to the cubic phase was seen upon heating to temperatures above
200 °C.