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Novel phosphate glass-ceramics and particles-containing phosphate glasses
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Journal of Material Sciences & Engineering

ISSN: 2169-0022

Open Access

Novel phosphate glass-ceramics and particles-containing phosphate glasses


15th Annual Congress on Materials Research & Technology

February 19-20, 2018 | Paris, France

Laeticia Petit

Tampere University of Technology, Finland

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Material Sci Eng

Abstract :

The fabrication of new rare-earth (RE) doped glasses has attracted lots of research interests, the improvement in the performances of the glasses remaining the prime objective of the studies. Silica glass, as a host material, has proven to be very attractive because of its wide wavelength range with good optical transparency and high mechanical strength, just to cite few attractive properties. However, RE tends to cluster in silica glasses. Phosphate glasses are good host materials due to their ability to incorporate high amount of RE. Because the local environment around the RE is of paramount importance for determining the optical properties, there is a constant interest in investigating new RE doped glasses with improved spectroscopic properties. A route of interest to improve the spectroscopic properties consists of controlling the RE optical response independently of the core glass composition. Different techniques have been developed: One technique consists of synthesizing RE doped nanoparticles directly in situ in the glass. In another technique, RE doped nanoparticles, formed by solution chemistry, are added in the glass batch prior to or after the melting using the direct doping method. In this presentation, we will review our latest development of glass-ceramics. First, we report the preparation and characterization of new Er3+ doped glasses. We discuss the impact of the glass composition and of the effect of nucleation and growth on the luminescence properties of the newly developed glasses. Then, we will explain the direct doping method and its challenges which are related to the particles corrosion. We explain how to process particles containing glasses which possess the spectroscopic properties of the particles.

Biography :

Laeticia Petit has received her PhD in Materials Science from the University of Bordeaux in France in 2002. She is currently an Assistant Professor in the Laboratory of Photonics at Tampere University of Technology (TUT, Finland). She is also an Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Biomedical Sciences and Engineering at TUT and in the Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory at Abo Akademi University, Finland. Her current research interests include the processing and characterization of novel active glasses/glass-ceramics and fibers for photonic applications. She focuses her research on understanding composition-structure-property relationship in these materials, with the goal to tailor new compositions to suit specific applications in photonics. He is co-author of 2 patents and more than 110 refereed publications, reviews, proceedings and book chapters and she has presented more than 15 invited and contributed presentations in her career.
Email:laeticia.petit@tut.fi

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