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The Elusive Excited Quintet 5D of Tb(III):: A Source of Luminescence and Resonance Energy Transfer in Terbium Compounds

  • Autores: Kamil Klier
  • Localización: Journal of chemical education, ISSN 0021-9584, Vol. 87, Nº 1 (January), 2010, págs. 45-46
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The understanding of electronic structure of atomic and molecular term states involved in spectroscopic transitions is aided by projecting combinations of micro-configurations to multi-electron states with “good” quantum numbers of angular momenta. In rare-earth (RE) compounds, atomic term labels are justifiably carried over to compounds, because the 4f orbitals are localized at the RE centers, and the transitions between them are modified by crystal-field splittings that are small compared to the spin−orbit interactions within the RE atom. The source of photoluminescence in Tb(III) compounds is lowest-lying excited quintet 5D4 originating from the [Xe]4f8 configuration, in contrast to other D-states originating from the [Xe]4f75d configuration, sometimes confused with the 5D4(4f8) state. The 5D4 state not only is missing in available databases (NIST Atomic Spectra Database Levels, http://physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/ASD/levels_form.html; Moore, C. E. Atomic Energy Levels as Derived from the Analyses of Optical Spectra; Vol. I−III; National Bureau of Standards Circular, 467, U.S. Government Printing Office: Washington, DC, 1949−1958; Martin, W. C. Atomic Energy Levels—the Rare Earth Elements; NSRDS-NBS 60; U.S. Department of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards: Washington, DC, 1978), but also its structure in terms of combinations of the 4f8 microstates has so far eluded interpretation. We present a shortcut method using the shift operators arriving at the 5D4(4f8) state, which turns out to be a linear combination of no fewer than 6 Slater determinants. We then compare the Tb(III) PL transitions 5D4 → 7FJ, J = 6, 5, 4, 3 in compounds as diverse as TbCl3(aq), Tb(III)-Y zeolite, and Tb(III) polystyrene sulfonate, all at similar wavelengths but showing features sensitive to chemical environment.


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