Logo image
IR-stimulated visible fluorescence in pink and brown diamond
Journal article   Peer reviewed

IR-stimulated visible fluorescence in pink and brown diamond

K S Byrne, J G Chapman and A N Luiten
Journal of physics. Condensed matter, Vol.26(11), 115504
2014
PMID: 24589842

Abstract

impurity and defect levels natural diamond optical properties
Irradiation of natural pink and brown diamond by middle-ultraviolet light (photon energy ≥ 4.1 eV ) is seen to induce anomalous fluorescence phenomena at N3 defect centres (structure N3−V). When diamonds primed in this fashion are subsequently exposed to infrared light (even with a delay of many hours), a transient burst of blue N3 fluorescence is observed. The dependence of this IR-triggered fluorescence on pump wavelength and intensity suggest that this fluorescence phenomena is intrinsically related to pink diamond photochromism. An energy transfer process between N3 defects and other defect species can account for both the UV-induced fluorescence intensity changes, and the apparent optical upconversion of IR light. From this standpoint, we consider the implications of this N3 fluorescence behaviour for the current understanding of pink diamond photochromism kinetics.

Details

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Industry collaboration
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
5 Physics
5.188 Deposition, Hardening & Coating
5.188.262 Diamond Films
Web Of Science research areas
Physics, Condensed Matter
ESI research areas
Physics
Logo image