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      Luminescence lifetime thermometry with Mn3+–Mn4+ co-doped nanocrystals

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          Abstract

          Luminescence thermometry is one of the most promising techniques of temperature sensing which provides fast and accurate readout in the non-contact regime.

          Abstract

          Luminescence thermometry is one of the most promising techniques of temperature sensing which provides fast and accurate readout in the non-contact regime. It has been shown that among six classes of thermometers, the most reliable are the ones whose operation is based on the kinetics of an excited level. In this work, we report luminescent thermometers based on the rise and decay times of Mn 3+ and Mn 4+ emission in co-doped nanocrystals. In order to understand the impact of the crystallographic structure on the relative sensitivities, five different hosts, namely Gd 3Al 5O 12, Gd 3Ga 5O 12, Lu 3Al 5O 12, YAlO 3 and Y 3Al 5O 12 co-doped with manganese ions were considered in the analysis. Straightforward correlation between the obtained values of the decay time τ 1 of the 2E excited state of Mn 4+, the relative sensitivities of the rise time- and decay time-based luminescent thermometers and the average M–O ( R −5) distances were found and discussed in terms of crystal field strength effects. The present study enables knowledgeable and intentional design of highly sensitive luminescent thermometers based on the kinetics of excited states.

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          Most cited references51

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          Thermometry at the nanoscale.

          Non-invasive precise thermometers working at the nanoscale with high spatial resolution, where the conventional methods are ineffective, have emerged over the last couple of years as a very active field of research. This has been strongly stimulated by the numerous challenging requests arising from nanotechnology and biomedicine. This critical review offers a general overview of recent examples of luminescent and non-luminescent thermometers working at nanometric scale. Luminescent thermometers encompass organic dyes, QDs and Ln(3+)ions as thermal probes, as well as more complex thermometric systems formed by polymer and organic-inorganic hybrid matrices encapsulating these emitting centres. Non-luminescent thermometers comprise of scanning thermal microscopy, nanolithography thermometry, carbon nanotube thermometry and biomaterials thermometry. Emphasis has been put on ratiometric examples reporting spatial resolution lower than 1 micron, as, for instance, intracellular thermometers based on organic dyes, thermoresponsive polymers, mesoporous silica NPs, QDs, and Ln(3+)-based up-converting NPs and β-diketonate complexes. Finally, we discuss the challenges and opportunities in the development for highly sensitive ratiometric thermometers operating at the physiological temperature range with submicron spatial resolution.
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            Luminescence nanothermometry.

            The current status of luminescence nanothermometry is reviewed in detail. Based on the main parameters of luminescence including intensity, bandwidth, bandshape, polarization, spectral shift and lifetime, we initially describe and compare the different classes of luminescence nanothermometry. Subsequently, the various luminescent materials used in each case are discussed and the mechanisms at the root of the luminescence thermal sensitivity are described. The most important results obtained in each case are summarized and the advantages and disadvantages of these approaches are discussed.
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              Narrow-band red-emitting Sr[LiAl3N4]:Eu2+ as a next-generation LED-phosphor material

              To facilitate the next generation of high-power white-light-emitting diodes (white LEDs), the discovery of more efficient red-emitting phosphor materials is essential. In this regard, the hardly explored compound class of nitridoaluminates affords a new material with superior luminescence properties. Doped with Eu(2+), Sr[LiAl3N4] emerged as a new high-performance narrow-band red-emitting phosphor material, which can efficiently be excited by GaN-based blue LEDs. Owing to the highly efficient red emission at λ(max) ~ 650 nm with a full-width at half-maximum of ~1,180 cm(-1) (~50 nm) that shows only very low thermal quenching (>95% relative to the quantum efficiency at 200 °C), a prototype phosphor-converted LED (pc-LED), employing Sr[LiAl3N4]:Eu(2+) as the red-emitting component, already shows an increase of 14% in luminous efficacy compared with a commercially available high colour rendering index (CRI) LED, together with an excellent colour rendition (R(a)8 = 91, R9 = 57). Therefore, we predict great potential for industrial applications in high-power white pc-LEDs.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JMCCCX
                Journal of Materials Chemistry C
                J. Mater. Chem. C
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2050-7526
                2050-7534
                2018
                2018
                : 6
                : 26
                : 7092-7100
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute of Low Temperature and Structure Research
                [2 ]Polish Academy of Sciences
                [3 ]Okólna 2
                [4 ]50-422 Wroclaw
                [5 ]Poland
                Article
                10.1039/C8TC01981A
                5103f111-b6d9-4a02-bb44-db8e467edd25
                © 2018

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use

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