First-principles Investigation of the Structure, Mobility and Optical Properties of Self-Trapped Excitons in Alkali Metal, Lanthanum and Barium Halide Scintillators

ORAL

Abstract

The performance of new and improved materials for gamma ray scintillator detectors is dependant on multiple factors such as quantum efficiency, energy transport etc. In halide scintillator materials the energy transport is often impacted by self-trapped exciton (STE) formation and mobility. We present first-principles calculations at the hybrid density functional theory level for the structure, mobility and optical properties of STEs and their associated lattice defects ($V_K$ centers) in two important families of scintillator materials, alkali metal and lanthanum halides (AX and LaX). AX and LaX have been extensively characterized by experiments and serve as benchmark systems to assess the accuracy of our theoretical procedure. We show that hydrid functionals accurately predict the different types of self-trapped excitons (on and off-center) found in AX and LX materials in agreement with EPR experiments. We then applied this approach to perform preliminary studies on classes of new scintillator materials including the barium mixed halides and compared with our new experimental results. These studies have the potential to benefit the development of improved scintillator materials tailored for specific applications.

Authors

  • Gregory Bizarri

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Mauro Del Ben

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

  • Edith Bourret

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA

  • Andrew Canning

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory