Photoluminescence of Cesium-Doped Sodium Iodide Films Irradiated by UV LED

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Oct 11;13(20):2747. doi: 10.3390/nano13202747.

Abstract

Alkali metal halides have long been used as scintillators for applications as sensors and detectors. Usually, a small amount of impurities are added to these inorganic materials to improve their luminescence efficiencies. We investigate the structures and luminescent properties of un-doped sodium iodide (NaI) and cesium-doped NaI (NaI:Cs) films deposited by thermal vacuum evaporation. Instead of using the toxic element thallium (Tl), we introduced cesium dopant into NaI. This is the first study for the NaI:Cs film excited by UV LED's ultraviolet C (273 nm, 4.54 eV). The luminescence spectra show two main peaks at 3.05 and 4.32/3.955 eV (for fused silica/B270 substrate), originating from the intrinsic defects and/or activator excited states and the intrinsic self-trapped excitons (STEs), respectively. In general, both Cs-doping and post-annealing processes enhance the luminescence performance of NaI films.

Keywords: Cs-doping; post-annealing; scintillator; self-trapped exciton; sodium iodide.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan, grant numbers MOST 111-2221-E-030-007, and NSC MOST 112-2112-M-030-00.