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Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers

We investigated the combined effects of temperature and X-rays exposures on the nature of point defects generated in Ge-doped multimode optical fibers. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) results on samples X-ray irradiated at 5 kGy(SiO2), employing different temperatures and dose rates, are repor...

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Autores principales: Alessi, A, Agnello, S, Girard, S, Di Francesca, D, Reghioua, I, Marcandella, C, Paillet, P, Richard, N, Martin-Samos, L, Cannas, M, Boukenter, A, Ouerdane, Y
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10853-017-1244-x
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2318921
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author Alessi, A
Agnello, S
Girard, S
Di Francesca, D
Reghioua, I
Marcandella, C
Paillet, P
Richard, N
Martin-Samos, L
Cannas, M
Boukenter, A
Ouerdane, Y
author_facet Alessi, A
Agnello, S
Girard, S
Di Francesca, D
Reghioua, I
Marcandella, C
Paillet, P
Richard, N
Martin-Samos, L
Cannas, M
Boukenter, A
Ouerdane, Y
author_sort Alessi, A
collection CERN
description We investigated the combined effects of temperature and X-rays exposures on the nature of point defects generated in Ge-doped multimode optical fibers. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) results on samples X-ray irradiated at 5 kGy(SiO2), employing different temperatures and dose rates, are reported and discussed. The data highlight the generation of the Ge(1), Ge(2), E′Ge and E′Si defects. For the Ge(1) and Ge(2), we observed a decrease in the induced defect concentrations for irradiation temperatures higher than ~450 K, whereas the E′ defects feature an opposite tendency. The comparison with previous post-irradiation thermal treatments reveals peculiar effects of the temperature increase during the irradiation. Such difference, confirmed also by online radiation-induced attenuation measurements, has to be considered for practical use of these fibers in a mixed environment. Importantly, even if post-irradiation fading should be considered, the Ge(1) and Ge(2) concentrations measured by postmortem EPR experiments in room-temperature-irradiated samples are quite representative of the concentrations induced in the temperature range 230–450 K regardless of the investigated dose rate. The enhancement of the E′ content can be related to the simultaneous generation of this defect with non-bridging oxygen hole center from strained bonds implying a relevant modification of the defects generation/formation processes in the host glass matrix.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1673599
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2017
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16735992022-06-30T22:23:21Zdoi:10.1007/s10853-017-1244-xhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2318921engAlessi, AAgnello, SGirard, SDi Francesca, DReghioua, IMarcandella, CPaillet, PRichard, NMartin-Samos, LCannas, MBoukenter, AOuerdane, YCoupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibersOtherWe investigated the combined effects of temperature and X-rays exposures on the nature of point defects generated in Ge-doped multimode optical fibers. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) results on samples X-ray irradiated at 5 kGy(SiO2), employing different temperatures and dose rates, are reported and discussed. The data highlight the generation of the Ge(1), Ge(2), E′Ge and E′Si defects. For the Ge(1) and Ge(2), we observed a decrease in the induced defect concentrations for irradiation temperatures higher than ~450 K, whereas the E′ defects feature an opposite tendency. The comparison with previous post-irradiation thermal treatments reveals peculiar effects of the temperature increase during the irradiation. Such difference, confirmed also by online radiation-induced attenuation measurements, has to be considered for practical use of these fibers in a mixed environment. Importantly, even if post-irradiation fading should be considered, the Ge(1) and Ge(2) concentrations measured by postmortem EPR experiments in room-temperature-irradiated samples are quite representative of the concentrations induced in the temperature range 230–450 K regardless of the investigated dose rate. The enhancement of the E′ content can be related to the simultaneous generation of this defect with non-bridging oxygen hole center from strained bonds implying a relevant modification of the defects generation/formation processes in the host glass matrix.oai:inspirehep.net:16735992017
spellingShingle Other
Alessi, A
Agnello, S
Girard, S
Di Francesca, D
Reghioua, I
Marcandella, C
Paillet, P
Richard, N
Martin-Samos, L
Cannas, M
Boukenter, A
Ouerdane, Y
Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
title Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
title_full Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
title_fullStr Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
title_full_unstemmed Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
title_short Coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
title_sort coupled irradiation-temperature effects on induced point defects in germanosilicate optical fibers
topic Other
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10853-017-1244-x
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2318921
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