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Optically reversible photochromism in natural pink diamond
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Optically reversible photochromism in natural pink diamond

K. S. Byrne, J. D. Anstie, J. G. Chapman and A. N. Luiten
Diamond and related materials, Vol.30, pp.31-36
2012

Abstract

Materials Science Materials Science, Coatings & Films Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Physical Sciences Physics Physics, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Science & Technology Technology
Naturally occurring pink diamonds include defect centers with properties that differ greatly from those of commonly synthesized diamond centers. The pink diamond color-center demonstrates optically-controllable photochromism which is stable at ambient temperatures. The nature of this defect and the origin of the photochromism are yet to be explained. In this work we show that the photochromic behavior can be explained by competing photoionization processes at multiple defect centers in response to an applied optical pump. Our approach quantitatively explains the dependence of both the response rate and the resulting color on the pump wavelength. From measurements of the photochromic response we are able to extract parameters that describe the ionization cross-sections of the involved centers.

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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
Materials Science, Coatings & Films
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Physics, Applied
Physics, Condensed Matter
ESI research areas
Materials Science
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