Tunneling recombination of trapped electrons and holes in KCl:AgCl and KCl:TlCl

Abstract
It is well established that exposure of KCl:AgCl (or KCl:TlCl) crystals at 77 K to ionizing radiation results in the trapping of holes as Cl2, VK centers, and electrons as Ag0 (Tl0). These crystals emit luminescence at 77 K which persists for many hours after the irradiation. Evidence is presented that indicates that this afterglow results from electron-hole recombination between nearby metal-atom-Cl2 pairs, and that the recombination does not occur by a thermally activated process but by a tunneling process. The time dependence of the intensity of the afterglow is qualitatively understood on the basis of a simple model. When the Cl2 are preferentially oriented in the crystal it is observed that the afterglow is partially polarized with the electric vector of the dominant component parallel to the Cl2 molecular axis. If a crystal containing oriented Cl2 is warmed, the degree of polarization remains constant up to the temperature range where the Cl2 disorient at an appreciable rate; in the latter range the degree of polarization goes to zero and then reverses sign before finally going to zero again. This reversal of the polarization which occurs when the Cl2 change orientation is interpreted as indicating that the tunneling probability is anisotropic.