Abstract:
A comparative investigation is made of phosphate, germanate, and lithium silicate glasses activated with Yb3+ and Er3+ ions in order to determine their potential usefulness for the development of laser-pumped (λ = 1.06 μ) amplifiers for short (10–8 sec) pulses at the λ = 1.54 μ wavelength. Some features of the spectral and luminescence charactenstics and the kinetics of energy transfer in these glasses are studied. It is shown that the increase in the population inversion of the 4I13/2 level of Er3+ ions in lithium silicate and germanate glasses is considerably slower than the increase in the absorbed pump energy. Possible mechanisms for this anomalous behavior are discussed. It is shown theoretically and experimentally that the main reason for this is reverse transfer of excitation energy from Er3+ to Yb3+ ions, which is almost absent in phosphate glasses.