A phosphor is a substance that exhibits the phenomenon of luminescence; it emits light when exposed to some type of radiant energy. The term is used both for fluorescence or phosphorescence substances which glow on exposure to ultraviolet or visible light, and cathodoluminescent substances which glow when struck by an electron beam () in a cathode-ray tube.
When a phosphor is exposed to radiation, the orbital in its are excited to a higher energy level; when they return to their former level they emit the energy as light of a certain color. Phosphors can be classified into two categories: fluorescent substances which emit the energy immediately and stop glowing when the exciting radiation is turned off, and Phosphorescence substances which emit the energy after a delay, so they keep glowing after the radiation is turned off, decaying in brightness over a period of milliseconds to days.
Fluorescent materials are used in applications in which the phosphor is excited continuously: (CRT) and plasma video display screens, fluoroscopy, fluorescent lights, scintillation sensors, most white LEDs, and for black light art. Phosphorescent materials are used where a persistent light is needed, such as glow-in-the-dark watch faces and aircraft instruments, and in radar to allow the target 'blips' to remain visible as the radar beam rotates. CRT phosphors were standardized beginning around World War II and designated by the letter "P" followed by a number.
Phosphorus, the light-emitting chemical element for which phosphors are named, emits light due to chemiluminescence, not phosphorescence.
The excitons are loosely bound electron–hole pairs that wander through the crystal lattice until they are captured as a whole by impurity centers. They then rapidly de-excite by emitting scintillation light (fast component).
In the conduction band, electrons are independent of their associated holes. Those electrons and holes are captured successively by impurity centers exciting certain not accessible to the excitons. The delayed de-excitation of those metastable impurity states, slowed by reliance on the low-probability forbidden mechanism, again results in light emission (slow component). In the case of inorganic , the activator impurities are typically chosen so that the emitted light is in the visible range or near ultraviolet, where are effective.
Phosphors are often transition-metal compounds or rare-earth compounds of various types. In inorganic phosphors, these inhomogeneities in the crystal structure are created usually by addition of a trace amount of , impurities called activators. (In rare cases or other can play the role of the impurity.) The wavelength emitted by the emission center is dependent on the atom itself and on the surrounding crystal structure.
The host materials are typically , and oxynitrides, , , or of zinc, cadmium, manganese, aluminium, silicon, or various . The activators prolong the emission time (afterglow). In turn, other materials (such as nickel) can be used to quench the afterglow and shorten the decay part of the phosphor emission characteristics.
Many phosphor powders are produced in low-temperature processes, such as sol-gel, and usually require post-annealing at temperatures of ~1000 °C, which is undesirable for many applications. However, proper optimization of the growth process allows manufacturers to avoid the annealing.
Phosphors used for require a multi-step production process, with details that vary depending on the particular phosphor. Bulk material must be milled to obtain a desired particle size range, since large particles produce a poor-quality lamp coating, and small particles produce less light and degrade more quickly. During the pottery firing of the phosphor, process conditions must be controlled to prevent oxidation of the phosphor activators or contamination from the process vessels. After milling, the phosphor may be washed to remove minor excess of activator elements. Volatile elements must not be allowed to escape during processing. Lamp manufacturers have changed compositions of phosphors to eliminate some toxic elements formerly used, such as beryllium, cadmium, or thallium.Kane, Raymond and Sell, Heinz (2001) Revolution in lamps: a chronicle of 50 years of progress, 2nd ed. The Fairmont Press. . Chapter 5 extensively discusses history, application and manufacturing of phosphors for lamps.
The commonly quoted parameters for phosphors are the wavelength of emission maximum (in nanometers, or alternatively color temperature in for white blends), the peak width (in nanometers at 50% of intensity), and decay time (in seconds).
Examples:
The degradation of electroluminescent devices depends on frequency of driving current, the luminance level, and temperature; moisture impairs phosphor lifetime very noticeably as well.
Harder, high-melting, water-insoluble materials display lower tendency to lose luminescence under operation.
Examples:
ZnS:Cu phosphor is used in glow-in-the-dark cosmetic creams frequently used for Halloween . Generally, the persistence of the phosphor increases as the wavelength increases. See also lightstick for chemiluminescence-based glowing items.
Copper doped zinc sulfide (ZnS:Cu) is the most common phosphor used and yields blue-green light. Copper and magnesium doped zinc sulfide yields yellow-orange light.
Tritium is also used as a source of radiation in various products utilizing tritium illumination.
ZnS:Cu was the first formulation successfully displaying electroluminescence, tested at 1936 by Georges Destriau in Madame Marie Curie laboratories in Paris.
Powder or AC electroluminescence is found in a variety of backlight and night light applications. Several groups offer branded EL offerings (e.g. IndiGlo used in some Timex watches) or "Lighttape", another trade name of an electroluminescent material, used in electroluminescent light strips. The Apollo space program is often credited with being the first significant use of EL for backlights and lighting.
Some rare-earth-dopant are photoluminescent and can serve as phosphors. Europium(II)-doped β-SiAlON absorbs in ultraviolet and visible light spectrum and emits intense broadband visible emission. Its luminance and color does not change significantly with temperature, due to the temperature-stable crystal structure. It has a great potential as a green down-conversion phosphor for white ; a yellow variant also exists (α-SiAlON). For white LEDs, a blue LED is used with a yellow phosphor, or with a green and yellow SiAlON phosphor and a red CaAlSiN3-based (CASN) phosphor.
White LEDs can also be made by coating near-ultraviolet-emitting LEDs with a mixture of high-efficiency europium-based red- and blue-emitting phosphors plus green-emitting copper- and aluminium-doped zinc sulfide . This is a method analogous to the way work.
Some newer white LEDs use a yellow and blue emitter in series, to approximate white; this technology is used in some Motorola phones such as the Blackberry as well as LED lighting and the original-version stacked emitters by using GaN on SiC on InGaP but was later found to fracture at higher drive currents.
Many white LEDs used in general lighting systems can be used for data transfer, as, for example, in systems that modulate the LED to act as a beacon.
It is also common for white LEDs to use phosphors other than Ce:YAG, or to use two or three phosphors to achieve a higher CRI, often at the cost of efficiency. Examples of additional phosphors are R9, which produces a saturated red, nitrides which produce red, and aluminates such as lutetium aluminum garnet that produce green. Silicate phosphors are brighter but fade more quickly, and are used in LCD LED backlights in mobile devices. LED phosphors can be placed directly over the die or made into a dome and placed above the LED: this approach is known as a remote phosphor. Some colored LEDs, instead of using a colored LED, use a blue LED with a colored phosphor because such an arrangement is more efficient than a colored LED. Oxynitride phosphors can also be used in LEDs. The precursors used to make the phosphors may degrade when exposed to air.
CRTs have also been widely used in scientific and engineering instrumentation, such as , usually with a single phosphor color, typically green. Phosphors for such applications may have long afterglow, for increased image persistence. A variation of the display CRT, used prior to the 1980s, was the CRT storage tube, a digital memory device which (in later forms) also provided a visible display of the stored data, using a variation of the same electron-beam excited phosphor technology.
The process of producing light in CRTs by electron-beam excited phosphorescence yields much faster signal response times than even modern (2020s) can achieve, which makes and light gun games possible with CRTs, but not LCDs. Also in contrast to most other video display types, because CRT technology draws an image by scanning an electron beam (or a formation of three beams) across a phosphor surface, a CRT has no intrinsic "native resolution" and does not require scaling to display raster images at different resolutions; the CRT can display any raster format natively, within the limits defined by the electron beam spot size and, for a color CRT, the dot pitch of the phosphor. Because of this operating principle, CRTs can produce images using either raster and vector imaging methods. Vector displays are impossible for display technologies that have permanent discrete pixels, including all LCDs, Plasma display, DMD projectors, and OLED (LED matrix, e.g. TFT OLED) panels.
The phosphors can be deposited as either thin film, or as discrete particles, a powder bound to the surface. Thin films have better lifetime and better resolution, but provide less bright and less efficient image than powder ones. This is caused by multiple internal reflections in the thin film, scattering the emitted light.
White (in black-and-white): The mix of zinc cadmium sulfide and zinc sulfide silver, the is the white P4 phosphor used in black and white television CRTs. Mixes of yellow and blue phosphors are usual. Mixes of red, green and blue, or a single white phosphor, can also be encountered.
Red: Yttrium oxide-sulfide activated with europium is used as the red phosphor in color CRTs. The development of color TV took a long time due to the search for a red phosphor. The first red emitting rare-earth phosphor, YVO4:Eu3+, was introduced by Levine and Palilla as a primary color in television in 1964. In single crystal form, it was used as an excellent polarizer and laser material.
Yellow: When mixed with cadmium sulfide, the resulting zinc cadmium sulfide , provides strong yellow light.
Green: Combination of zinc sulfide with copper, the P31 phosphor or , provides green light peaking at 531 nm, with long glow.
Blue: Combination of zinc sulfide with few ppm of silver, the ZnS:Ag, when excited by electrons, provides strong blue glow with maximum at 450 nm, with short afterglow with 200 nanosecond duration. It is known as the P22B phosphor. This material, zinc sulfide silver, is still one of the most efficient phosphors in cathode-ray tubes. It is used as a blue phosphor in color CRTs.
The phosphors are usually poor electrical conductors. This may lead to deposition of residual charge on the screen, effectively decreasing the energy of the impacting electrons due to electrostatic repulsion (an effect known as "sticking"). To eliminate this, a thin layer of aluminium (about 100 nm) is deposited over the phosphors, usually by vacuum evaporation, and connected to the conductive layer inside the tube. This layer also reflects the phosphor light to the desired direction, and protects the phosphor from ion bombardment resulting from an imperfect vacuum.
To reduce the image degradation by reflection of ambient light, contrast can be increased by several methods. In addition to black masking of unused areas of screen, the phosphor particles in color screens are coated with pigments of matching color. For example, the red phosphors are coated with ferric oxide (replacing earlier Cd(S,Se) due to cadmium toxicity), blue phosphors can be coated with marine blue (CoO· nalumina) or ultramarine (). Green phosphors based on ZnS:Cu do not have to be coated due to their own yellowish color.
The most common combination is (blue + yellow). Other ones are (blue + yellow), and (blue + green + red – does not contain cadmium and has poor efficiency). The color tone can be adjusted by the ratios of the components.
As the compositions contain discrete grains of different phosphors, they produce image that may not be entirely smooth. A single, white-emitting phosphor, overcomes this obstacle. Due to its low efficiency, it is used only on very small screens.
The screens are typically covered with phosphor using sedimentation coating, where particles suspended in a solution are let to settle on the surface.Lakshmanan, p. 54.
In penetron, different color phosphors are layered and separated with dielectric material. The acceleration voltage is used to determine the energy of the electrons; lower-energy ones are absorbed in the top layer of the phosphor, while some of the higher-energy ones shoot through and are absorbed in the lower layer. So either the first color or a mixture of the first and second color is shown. With a display with red outer layer and green inner layer, the manipulation of accelerating voltage can produce a continuum of colors from red through orange and yellow to green.
Another method is using a mixture of two phosphors with different characteristics. The brightness of one is linearly dependent on electron flux, while the other one's brightness saturates at higher fluxes—the phosphor does not emit any more light regardless of how many more electrons impact it. At low electron flux, both phosphors emit together; at higher fluxes, the luminous contribution of the nonsaturating phosphor prevails, changing the combined color.
Such displays can have high resolution, due to absence of two-dimensional structuring of RGB CRT phosphors. Their color palette is, however, very limited. They were used e.g. in some older military radar displays.
Color CRTs require three different phosphors, emitting in red, green and blue, patterned on the screen. Three separate electron guns are used for color production (except for displays that use beam-index tube technology, which is rare). The red phosphor has always been a problem, being the dimmest of the three necessitating the brighter green and blue electron beam currents be adjusted down to make them equal the red phosphor's lower brightness. This made early color TVs only usable indoors as bright light made it impossible to see the dim picture, while portable black-and-white TVs viewable in outdoor sunlight were already common.
The composition of the phosphors changed over time, as better phosphors were developed and as environmental concerns led to lowering the content of cadmium and later abandoning it entirely. The was replaced with with lower cadmium/zinc ratio, and then with cadmium-free .
The blue phosphor stayed generally unchanged, a silver-doped zinc sulfide. The green phosphor initially used manganese-doped zinc silicate, then evolved through silver-activated cadmium-zinc sulfide, to lower-cadmium copper-aluminium activated formula, and then to cadmium-free version of the same. The red phosphor saw the most changes; it was originally manganese-activated zinc phosphate, then a silver-activated cadmium-zinc sulfide, then the europium(III) activated phosphors appeared; first in an yttrium vanadate matrix, then in yttrium oxide and currently in yttrium oxysulfide. The evolution of the phosphors was therefore (ordered by B-G-R):
For blue color, is employed. However, it saturates. can be used as an alternative that is more linear at high energy densities.
For green, a terbium-activated ; its color purity and brightness at low excitation densities is worse than the zinc sulfide alternative, but it behaves linear at high excitation energy densities, while zinc sulfide saturates. However, it also saturates, so or can be substituted. is bright but water-sensitive, degradation-prone, and the plate-like morphology of its crystals hampers its use; these problems are solved now, so it is gaining use due to its higher linearity.
is used for red emission.
+Standard phosphor types | |||||||
P1, GJ | Willemite:Mn (Willemite) | Green | 525 nm | 40 nm | 1-100ms | CRT, Lamp | Oscilloscopes and monochrome monitors |
P2 | ZnS:Cu(Ag)(B*) | Blue-Green | 543 nm | – | Long | CRT | Oscilloscopes |
P3 | Zn8:BeSi5O19:Mn | Yellow | 602 nm | – | Medium/13 ms | CRT | Amber monochrome monitors |
P4 | ZnS:Ag+(Zn,Cd)S:Ag | White | 565,540 nm | – | Short | CRT | Black and white TV CRTs and display tubes. |
P4 (Cd-free) | ZnS:Ag+ZnS:Cu+Y2O2S:Eu | White | – | – | Short | CRT | Black and white TV CRTs and display tubes, Cd free. |
P5 | Scheelite:W | Blue | 430 nm | – | Very Short | CRT | Film |
P6 | ZnS:Ag+ZnS:CdS:Ag | White | 565,460 nm | – | Short | CRT | |
P7 | (Zn,Cd)S:Cu | Blue with Yellow persistence | 558,440 nm | – | Long | CRT | Radar PPI, old EKG monitors, early oscilloscopes |
P10 | KCl | Green-absorbing scotophor | – | – | Long | Skiatron | Radar screens; turns from translucent white to dark magenta, stays changed until erased by heating or infrared light |
P11, BE | ZnS:Ag,Cl or ZnS:Zn | Blue | 460 nm | – | 0.01-1 ms | CRT, VFD | Display tubes and VFDs; Oscilloscopes (for fast photographic recording) |
P12 | Zn(Mg)F2:Mn | Orange | 590 nm | – | Medium/long | CRT | Radar |
P13 | MgSi2O6:Mn | Reddish-Orange | 640 nm | – | Medium | CRT | Flying spot scanning systems and photographic applications |
P14 | ZnS:Ag on ZnS:CdS:Cu | Blue with Orange persistence | – | – | Medium/long | CRT | Radar PPI, old EKG monitors |
P15 | ZnO:Zn | Blue-Green | 504,391 nm | – | Extremely Short | CRT | Television pickup by flying-spot scanning |
P16 | CaMgSi2O6:Ce | Blue-Purple | 380 nm | – | Very Short | CRT | Flying spot scanning systems and photographic applications |
P17 | ZnO,ZnCdS:Cu | Blue-Yellow | 504,391 nm | – | Blue-Short, Yellow-Long | CRT | |
P18 | CaMgSi2O6:Ti, BeSi2O6:Mn | White | 545,405 nm | – | Medium to Short | CRT | |
P19, LF | (KF,MgF2):Mn | Orange-Yellow | 590 nm | – | Long | CRT | Radar screens |
P20, KA | (Zn,Cd)S:Ag or (Zn,Cd)S:Cu | Yellow-Green | 555 nm | – | 1–100 ms | CRT | Display tubes |
P21 | MgF2:Mn2+ | Reddish | 605 nm | – | – | CRT, Radar | Registered by Allen B DuMont Laboratories |
P22R | Y2O2S:Eu+Fe2O3 | Red | 611 nm | – | Short | CRT | Red phosphor for TV screens |
P22G | (Zn,Cd)S:Cu,Al | Green | 530 nm | – | Short | CRT | Green phosphor for TV screens |
P22B | ZnS:Ag+cobalt-on-aluminium oxide | Blue | – | – | Short | CRT | Blue phosphor for television screens |
P23 | ZnS:Ag+(Zn,Cd)S:Ag | White | 575,460 nm | – | Short | CRT, Direct viewing television | Registered by United States Radium Corporation. |
P24, GE | Zinc oxide:Zn | Green | 505 nm | – | 1–10 μs | VFD | most common phosphor in vacuum fluorescent displays. |
P25 | CaSi2O6:Pb:Mn | Orange | 610 nm | – | Medium | CRT | Military Displays - 7UP25 CRT |
P26, LC | (KF,MgF2):Mn | Orange | 595 nm | – | Long | CRT | Radar screens |
P27 | ZnPO4:Mn | Reddish Orange | 635 nm | – | Medium | CRT | Color TV monitor service |
P28, KE | (Zn,Cd)S:Cu,Cl | Yellow | – | – | Medium | CRT | Display tubes |
P29 | Alternating P2 and P25 stripes | Blue-Green/Orange stripes | – | – | Medium | CRT | Radar screens |
P31, GH | ZnS:Cu or ZnS:Cu,Ag | Yellowish-green | – | – | 0.01-1 ms | CRT | Oscilloscopes and monochrome monitors |
P33, LD | MgF2:Mn | Orange | 590 nm | – | > 1sec | CRT | Radar screens |
P34 | – | Bluish Green-Yellow Green | – | – | Very Long | CRT | – |
P35 | ZnS,ZnSe:Ag | Blue-White | 455 nm | – | Medium Short | CRT | Photographic registration on orthochromatic film materials |
P38, LK | (Zn,Mg)F2:Mn | Orange-Yellow | 590 nm | – | Long | CRT | Radar screens |
P39, GR | Willemite:Mn,As | Green | 525 nm | – | Long | CRT | Display tubes |
P40, GA | ZnS:Ag+(Zn,Cd)S:Cu | White | – | – | Long | CRT | Display tubes |
P43, GY | Gd2O2S:Tb | Yellow-Green | 545 nm | – | Medium | CRT | Display tubes, Electronic Portal Imaging Devices (EPIDs) used in radiation therapy linear accelerators for cancer treatment |
P45, WB | Y2O2S:Tb | White | 545 nm | – | Short | CRT | Viewfinders |
P46, KG | Y3Al5O12:Ce | Green | 530 nm | – | Very short (70ns) | CRT | Beam-index tube |
P47, BH | Yttrium silicate:Ce | Blue | 400 nm | – | Very short | CRT | Beam-index tube |
P53, KJ | Y3Al5O12:Tb | Yellow-Green | 544 nm | – | Short | CRT | Projection tubes |
P55, BM | ZnS:Ag,Al | Blue | 450 nm | – | Short | CRT | Projection tubes |
ZnS:Ag | Blue | 450 nm | – | – | CRT | – | |
ZnS:Cu,Al or ZnS:Cu,Au,Al | Green | 530 nm | – | – | CRT | – | |
(Zn,Cd)S:Cu,Cl+(Zn,Cd)S:Ag,Cl | White | – | – | – | CRT | – | |
Yttrium silicate:Tb | Green | 545 nm | – | – | CRT | Projection tubes | |
Y2OS:Tb | Green | 545 nm | – | – | CRT | Display tubes | |
Y3(Al,Ga)5O12:Ce | Green | 520 nm | – | Short | CRT | Beam-index tube | |
Y3(Al,Ga)5O12:Tb | Yellow-Green | 544 nm | – | Short | CRT | Projection tubes | |
Indium borate:Tb | Yellow-Green | 550 nm | – | – | CRT | – | |
InBO3:Eu | Yellow | 588 nm | – | – | CRT | – | |
InBO3:Tb+InBO3:Eu | amber | – | – | – | CRT | Computer displays | |
InBO3:Tb+InBO3:Eu+ZnS:Ag | White | – | – | – | CRT | – | |
(Ba,Eu)Mg2Al16O27 | Blue | – | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
(Ce,Tb)MgAl11O19 | Green | 546 nm | 9 nm | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
BAM | BaMgAl10O17:Eu,Mn | Blue | 450 nm | – | – | Lamp, displays | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps |
BaMg2Al16O27:Eu(II) | Blue | 450 nm | 52 nm | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
BAM | BaMgAl10O17:Eu,Mn | Blue-Green | 456 nm,514 nm | – | – | Lamp | – |
BaMg2Al16O27:Eu(II),Mn(II) | Blue-Green | 456 nm, 514 nm | 50 nm 50% | – | Lamp | ||
Ce0.67Tb0.33MgAl11O19:Ce,Tb | Green | 543 nm | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
Zn2SiO4:Mn,Sb2O3 | Green | 528 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
calcium silicate:Pb,Mn | Orange-Pink | 615 nm | 83 nm | – | Lamp | ||
CaWO4 (Scheelite) | Blue | 417 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
CaWO4:Pb | Blue | 433 nm/466 nm | 111 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth | |
MgWO4 | Pale Blue | 473 nm | 118 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth, deluxe blend component | |
(Sr,Eu,Ba,Ca)5(PO4)3Cl | Blue | – | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
Sr5Cl(PO4)3:Eu(II) | Blue | 447 nm | 32 nm | – | Lamp | – | |
(Ca,Sr,Ba)3(PO4)2Cl2:Eu | Blue | 452 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
(Sr,Ca,Ba)10(PO4)6Cl2:Eu | Blue | 453 nm | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
Blue | 460 nm | 98 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth, deluxe blend component | ||
Sr6P5BO20:Eu | Blue-Green | 480 nm | 82 nm | – | Lamp | – | |
Ca5F(PO4)3:Sb | Blue | 482 nm | 117 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth | |
(Ba,Ti)2P2O7:Ti | Blue-Green | 494 nm | 143 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth, deluxe blend component | |
3Sr3(PO4)2.SrF2:Sb,Mn | Blue | 502 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
Sr5F(PO4)3:Sb,Mn | Blue-Green | 509 nm | 127 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth | |
Sr5F(PO4)3:Sb,Mn | Blue-Green | 509 nm | 127 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth | |
LaPO4:Ce,Tb | Green | 544 nm | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
(La,Ce,Tb)PO4 | Green | – | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
(La,Ce,Tb)PO4:Ce,Tb | Green | 546 nm | 6 nm | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
Ca3(PO4)2.calcium fluoride:Ce,Mn | Yellow | 568 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
(Ca,Zn,Mg)3(PO4)2:Sn | Orange-Pink | 610 nm | 146 nm | – | Lamp | Wide bandwidth, blend component | |
(Zn,Sr)3(PO4)2:Mn | Orange-Red | 625 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
(Sr,Mg)3(PO4)2:Sn | Light Orange-Pink | 626 nm | 120 nm | – | Fluorescent lamps | Wide bandwidth, deluxe blend component | |
(Sr,Mg)3(PO4)2:Sn(II) | Orange-red | 630 nm | – | – | Fluorescent lamps | – | |
Ca5F(PO4)3:Sb,Mn | 3800K | – | – | – | Fluorescent lamps | Lite-white blend | |
Ca5(F,Cl)(PO4)3:Sb,Mn | White-Cold/Warm | – | – | – | Fluorescent lamps | 2600 to 9900 K, for very high output lamps | |
(Y,Eu)2O3 | Red | – | – | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | |
Red | 611 nm | 4 nm | – | Lamp | Trichromatic fluorescent lamps | ||
Mg4(F)GeO6:Mn | Red | 658 nm | 17 nm | – | High-pressure mercury lamps | ||
Mg4(F)(Ge,Sn)O6:Mn | Red | 658 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
Y(P,V)O4:Eu | Orange-Red | 619 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
YVO4:Eu | Orange-Red | 619 nm | – | – | High Pressure Mercury and Metal Halide Lamps | – | |
Y2O2S:Eu | Red | 626 nm | – | – | Lamp | – | |
3.5 magnesium oxide · 0.5 MgF2 · GeO2 :Mn | Red | 655 nm | – | – | Lamp | 3.5 magnesium oxide · 0.5 MgF2 · GeO2 :Mn | |
Mg5As2O11:Mn | Red | 660 nm | – | – | High-pressure mercury lamps, 1960s | – | |
SrAl2O7:Pb | Ultraviolet | 313 nm | – | – | Special fluorescent lamps for medical use | Ultraviolet | |
CAM | LaMgAl11O19:Ce | Ultraviolet | 340 nm | 52 nm | – | Black-light fluorescent lamps | Ultraviolet |
LAP | LaPO4:Ce | Ultraviolet | 320 nm | 38 nm | – | Medical and scientific UV lamps | Ultraviolet |
SAC | SrAl12O19:Ce | Ultraviolet | 295 nm | 34 nm | – | Lamp | Ultraviolet |
SrAl11Si0.75O19:Ce0.15Mn0.15 | Green | 515 nm | 22 nm | – | Lamp | Monochromatic lamps for copiersLagos C (1974) "Strontium aluminate phosphor activated by cerium and manganese" | |
BSP | BaSi2O5:Pb | Ultraviolet | 350 nm | 40 nm | – | Lamp | Ultraviolet |
SrFB2O3:Eu(II) | Ultraviolet | 366 nm | – | – | Lamp | Ultraviolet | |
SBE | SrB4O7:Eu | Ultraviolet | 368 nm | 15 nm | – | Lamp | Ultraviolet |
SMS | Sr2MgSi2O7:Pb | Ultraviolet | 365 nm | 68 nm | – | Lamp | Ultraviolet |
MgGa2O4:Mn(II) | Blue-Green | – | – | – | Lamp | Black light displays |
+ !Phosphor !Chemical formula !Color !Wavelength !Decay !Afterglow !X-ray absorption !Usage | |||||||
Gd2O2S:Eu | Red | 627 nm | 850 μs | Yes | High | X-ray, neutrons and gamma | |
Gd2O2S:Pr | Green | 513 nm | 4 μs | No | High | X-ray, neutrons and gamma | |
Green | 513 nm | 7 μs | No | High | X-ray, neutrons and gamma | ||
Y2O2S:Pr | White | 513 nm | 7 μs | No | Low-energy X-ray | ||
HS | Green | 560 nm | 80 μs | Yes | Efficient but low-res X-ray | ||
HSr | Red | 630 nm | 80 μs | Yes | Efficient but low-res X-ray | ||
CdWO4 | Blue | 475 nm | 28 μs | No | Intensifying phosphor for X-ray and gamma | ||
CaWO4 | Blue | 410 nm | 20 μs | No | Intensifying phosphor for X-ray and gamma | ||
MgWO4 | White | 500 nm | 80 μs | No | Intensifying phosphor | ||
YAP | YAlO3:Ce | Blue | 370 nm | 25 ns | No | For electrons, suitable for photomultipliers | |
YAG | Y3Al5O12:Ce | Green | 550 nm | 70 ns | No | For electrons, suitable for photomultipliers | |
YGG | Green | 530 nm | 250 ns | Low | For electrons, suitable for photomultipliers | ||
CdS:In | Green | 525 nm | <1 ns | No | Ultrafast, for electrons | ||
ZnO:Ga | Blue | 390 nm | <5 ns | No | Ultrafast, for electrons | ||
Anthracene | Blue | 447 nm | 32 ns | No | For alpha particles and electrons | ||
plastic ( EJ-212) | Blue | 400 nm | 2.4 ns | No | For alpha particles and electrons | ||
P1 | Zn2SiO4:Mn | Green | 530 nm | 11 ns | Low | For electrons | |
GS | ZnS:Cu | Green | 520 nm | Minutes | Long | For X-rays | |
sodium iodide:Tl | For X-ray, alpha, and electrons | ||||||
Caesium iodide:Tl | Green | 545 nm | 5 μs | Yes | For X-ray, alpha, and electrons | ||
ND | 6lithium fluoride/ZnS:Ag | Blue | 455 nm | 80 μs | For | ||
NDg | Green | 565 nm | 35 μs | For neutrons | |||
Cerium doped YAG phosphor | Yellow |
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