SHAO Tian, LYU Fanglin, LUO Heng, LIU Taiqiao, Shen Andy Hsitien. Comparison between Greenish-Blue and Orange Phosphorescence in HPHT Synthetic Diamond[J]. Journal of Gems & Gemmology, 2024, 26(S1): 6-9.
Citation: SHAO Tian, LYU Fanglin, LUO Heng, LIU Taiqiao, Shen Andy Hsitien. Comparison between Greenish-Blue and Orange Phosphorescence in HPHT Synthetic Diamond[J]. Journal of Gems & Gemmology, 2024, 26(S1): 6-9.

Comparison between Greenish-Blue and Orange Phosphorescence in HPHT Synthetic Diamond

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  • Received Date: July 14, 2024
  • Besides the greenish-blue one, the orange phosphorescence (-590 nm, 2.1 eV), reported by Watanabe et al., in 1997, is another diagnostic feature for separating high-pressure-high-temperature (HPHT) synthetic diamonds from others. Interestingly, the greenish-blue phosphorescence probably has some connection with the orange one. For instance, the greenish-blue one decays much faster in diamonds which contain both phosphorescence features. However, the basic description of the orange phosphorescence is still limited. Using photoluminescence (PL), thermoluminescence (TL) and other technologies, we characterized the optical features of the orange phosphorescence. It is highly likely due to other defects, rather than the nitrogen-boron pair (Zhao et al., 2023; Zhang et al., 2023), for its distinct excitation, polarization and thermoluminescence features.

  • Figure  1.  (a) Fluorescence (left) and Phosphorescence (right) images of a typical HPHT synthetic diamond in a DiamondViewTM; (b) phosphorescence images captured in a lightbox and a mercury lamp; (c-e) phosphorescence spectra under intrinsic, SWUV and LWUV excitation conditions, including their decay processes and colour calculations respectively
    Figure  2.  (a) Diagram of the polarization spectroscopical measurement setup; (b, d) A redshift of the position of the greenish-blue phosphorescence band with polarizer rotating from 0 to 90°, the 455 nm shoulder disappears while the 510 nm shoulder appears gradually; (c, e) A strengthening of the intensity of the orange phosphorescence band with the polarizer rotating from 0 to 90°
    Figure  3.  (a) The thermoluminescence curves of the greenish-blue and orange phosphorescence under intrinsic and LWUV conditions, respectively. The TL curve of the orange phosphorescence under intrinsic excitation is an overlap of the greenish-blue phosphorescence and the orange one which is excited by LWUV excitation; (b-c) the three-dimensional TL spectra of samples under intrinsic and LWUV excitation conditions
    Figure  4.  (a) A negative correlation between the ratio of the area of the orange band to the greenish-blue one, and the lifetime of the greenish-blue band; (b-c) the increment of signal of BS and NS under intrinsic excitation conditions: (d-e) under LWUV excitation condition, only the BS increases while the NS keep unchanged
  • [1]
    Watanabe K, Lawson S, Isoya J, et al. Phosphorescence in high-pressure synthetic diamond[J]. Diamond and Related Materials, 1997, 6(1): 99-106.
    [2]
    Zhao J, Green B L, Breeze B, et al. Phosphorescence and donor-acceptor pair recombination in laboratory-grown diamonds[J]. 2023(165 203): 1-14.
    [3]
    Zhang K, Sehn C, Yan L, et al. Long-lifetime phosphorescence in diamond for data storage[J]. Nano, 2023(55): 102 176.
    [4]
    Shao T, Lyu F, Liu T, et al. Spatial distribution of greenish blue phosphorescence in HPHT synthetic diamond: The dual role of boron[J]. Carbon, 2024(218): 118 730.

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