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1.
Dalton Trans ; 53(10): 4607-4616, 2024 Mar 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38349616

RESUMEN

Tm3+/Yb3+-codoped ZrScW2PO12 microparticles were prepared in order to solve the problems of the severe thermal quenching and unsatisfactory thermometric properties of most luminescent materials. The synthesized materials exhibit a rarely observed negative thermal expansion (NTE) effect, which was verified by in situ X-ray diffraction experiments, performed under high temperature conditions. Upon excitation with a 980 nm laser, bright blue upconversion (UC) emissions originating from Tm3+ were observed. Moreover, owing to the promoted energy transfer, cross-relaxation and non-radiative decay processes at high temperatures triggered by the NTE effect, the observed UC emissions arising from 1G4 and 3F2,3 levels show non-monotonic responses to temperature. By analysing the temperature-dependent luminescence intensity ratio of these UC emissions originating from the non-thermally coupled levels of Tm3+ (1G4 and 3F2,3), the thermometric properties of the prepared microparticles were investigated in detail. Interestingly, the maximum absolute and relative sensitivities of the synthesized compounds are 0.09 and 1.45% K-1, respectively, which are independent of Yb3+ content, but they can be manipulated by employing different sensing modes. Our results manifest that the exploitation of the NTE effect is an efficient way to control the UC luminescence features of rare earth ions and to realize high performance optical thermometry.

2.
Molecules ; 28(17)2023 Aug 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37687189

RESUMEN

A series of novel 3D coordination polymers [Ln2(Qdca)3(H2O)x]·yH2O (x = 3 or 4, y = 0-4) assembled from selected lanthanide ions (Ln(III) = Nd, Eu, Tb, and Er) and a non-explored quinoline-2,4-dicarboxylate building block (Qdca2- = C11H5NO42-) were prepared under hydrothermal conditions at temperatures of 100, 120, and 150 °C. Generally, an increase in synthesis temperature resulted in structural transformations and the formation of more hydrated compounds. The metal complexes were characterized by elemental analysis, single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction methods, thermal analysis (TG-DSC), ATR/FTIR, UV/Vis, and luminescence spectroscopy. The structural variety of three-dimensional coordination polymers can be ascribed to the temperature effect, which enforces the diversity of quinoline-2,4-dicarboxylate ligand denticity and conformation. The Qdca2- ligand only behaves as a bridging or bridging-chelating building block binding two to five metal centers with seven different coordination modes arising mainly from different carboxylate group coordination types. The presence of water molecules in the structures of complexes is crucial for their stability. The removal of both coordinated and non-coordinated water molecules leads to the disintegration and combustion of metal-organic frameworks to the appropriate lanthanide oxides. The luminescence features of complexes, quantum yield, and luminescent lifetimes were measured and analyzed. Only the Eu complexes show emission in the VIS region, whereas Nd and Er complexes emit in the NIR range. The luminescence properties of complexes were correlated with the crystal structures of the investigated complexes.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(2): 3244-3252, 2023 Jan 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36601726

RESUMEN

Optically active luminescent materials based on lanthanide ions attract significant attention due to their unique spectroscopic properties, nonlinear optical activity, and the possibility of application as contactless sensors. Lanthanide metal-organic frameworks (Ln-MOFs) that exhibit strong second-harmonic generation (SHG) and are optically active in the NIR region are unexpectedly underrepresented. Moreover, such Ln-MOFs require ligands that are chiral and/or need multistep synthetic procedures. Here, we show that the NIR pulsed laser irradiation of the noncentrosymmetric, isostructural Ln-MOF materials (MOF-Er3+ (1) and codoped MOF-Yb3+/Er3+ (2)) that are constructed from simple, achiral organic substrates in a one-step procedure results in strong and tunable SHG activity. The SHG signals could be easily collected, exciting the materials in a broad NIR spectral range, from ≈800 to 1500 nm, resulting in the intense color of emission, observed in the entire visible spectral region. Moreover, upon excitation in the range of ≈900 to 1025 nm, the materials also exhibit the NIR luminescence of Er3+ ions, centered at ≈1550 nm. The use of a 975 nm pulse excitation allows simultaneous observations of the conventional NIR emission of Er3+ and the SHG signal, altogether tuned by the composition of the Ln-MOF materials. Taking the benefits of different thermal responses of the mentioned effects, we have developed a nonlinear optical thermometer based on lanthanide-MOF materials. In this system, the SHG signal decreases with temperature, whereas the NIR emission band of Er3+ slightly broadens, allowing ratiometric (Er3+ NIR 1550 nm/SHG 488 nm) temperature monitoring. Our study provides a groundwork for the rational design of readily available and self-monitoring NLO-active Ln-MOFs with the desired optical and electronic properties.

4.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 12(5)2022 Feb 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35269286

RESUMEN

Materials that generate pure, single-color emission are desirable in the development and manufacturing of modern optoelectronic devices. This work shows the possibility of generating pure, green up-conversion luminescence upon the excitation of Er3+-doped nanomaterials with a 785 nm NIR laser. The up-converting inorganic nanoluminophores YVO4: Er3+ and YVO4: Yb3+ and Er3+ were obtained using a hydrothermal method and subsequent calcination. The synthesized vanadate nanomaterials had a tetragonal structure and crystallized in the form of nearly spherical nanoparticles. Up-conversion emission spectra of the nanomaterials were measured using laser light sources with λex = 785 and 975 nm. Importantly, under the influence of the mentioned laser irradiation, the as-prepared samples exhibited bright green up-conversion luminescence that was visible to the naked eye. Depending on the dopant ions used and the selected excitation wavelengths, two (green) or three (green and red) bands originating from erbium ions appeared in the emission spectra. In this way, by changing the UC mechanisms, pure green luminescence of the material can be obtained. The proposed strategy, in combination with various single-doped UC nanomaterials activated with Er3+, might be beneficial for modern optoelectronics, such as light-emitting diodes with a rich color gamut for back-light display applications.

5.
Carbohydr Polym ; 279: 119010, 2022 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34980354

RESUMEN

Cellulose might be a promising material for surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) substrates due to its wide availability, low cost, ease of fabrication, high flexibility and low optical activity. This work shows, for the first time development of the cellulose-based substrate, that owes its SERS activity to the presence of gold nanorods in its internal structure, and not only on the surface, as it is shown elsewhere, thus ensuring superior stability of the obtained material. This flexible cellulose-based substrate exhibiting plasmonic activity, provide easy and reproducible detection of different analytes via SERS technique. The substrate was prepared by introduction of gold nanorods into the cellulose fibers matrix using an eco-friendly process based on N-Methylmorpholine-N-Oxide. Au-modified cellulose fibers were used for the detection of p-Mercaptobenzoic acid and Bovine Serum Albumin by the SERS method. The obtained results show that this substrate offers large signal enhancement of 6-orders of magnitude, and high signal reproducibility with a relative standard deviation of 8.3%. Additionally, washing tests (90 °C, 20 h) showed superior stability of the as prepared plasmonic fibers, thus proving the good reusability of the substrates and the long shelf life.


Asunto(s)
Benzoatos/análisis , Celulosa/química , Oro/química , Nanotubos/química , Albúmina Sérica Bovina/análisis , Compuestos de Sulfhidrilo/análisis , Benzoatos/química , Albúmina Sérica Bovina/química , Espectrometría Raman , Compuestos de Sulfhidrilo/química
6.
Dalton Trans ; 50(41): 14864-14871, 2021 Oct 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34604874

RESUMEN

Pressure is an important physical parameter and hence its monitoring is very important for different industrial and scientific applications. Although commonly used luminescent pressure sensors (ruby-Al2O3:Cr3+ and SrB4O7:Sm2+) allow optical monitoring of pressure in compressed systems (usually in a diamond anvil cell; DAC), their detection resolution is limited by sensitivity, i.e., pressure response in a form of the detected spectral shift. Here we report, a breakthrough in optical pressure sensing by developing an ultra-sensitive NIR pressure sensor (dλ/dP = 1.766 nm GPa-1). This luminescent manometer is based on the optically active YVO4:Yb3+-Er3+ phosphor material which exhibits the largest spectral shift as a function of pressure compared to other luminescent pressure gauges reported elsewhere. In addition, thanks to the locations of excitation and emission in the NIR range, the developed optical manometer allows high-pressure measurements (without spectral overlapping/interferences) of various luminescent organic and inorganic materials, which are typically excited and can emit in the UV-vis spectral ranges.

7.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(39): 43933-43941, 2020 Sep 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32869638

RESUMEN

Lanthanide-based luminescent nanothermometers play a crucial role in optical temperature determination. However, because of the strong thermal quenching of the luminescence, as well as the deterioration of their sensitivity and resolution with temperature elevation, they can operate in a relatively low-temperature range, usually from cryogenic to ≈800 K. In this work, we show how to overcome these limitations and monitor very high-temperature values, with high sensitivity (≈2.1% K-1) and good thermal resolution (≈1.4 K) at around 1000 K. As an optical probe of temperature, we chose upconverting Yb3+-Tm3+ codoped YVO4 nanoparticles. For ratiometric sensing in the low-temperature range, we used the relative intensities of the Tm3+ emissions associated with the 3F2,3 and 3H4 thermally coupled levels, that is, 3F2,3 → 3H6/3H4 → 3H6 (700/800 nm) band intensity ratio. In order to improve sensitivity and resolution in the high-temperature range, we used the 940/800 nm band intensity ratio of the nonthermally coupled levels of Yb3+ (2F5/2 → 2F7/2) and Tm3+ (3H4 → 3H6). These NIR bands are very intense, even at extreme temperature values, and their intensity ratio changes significantly, allowing accurate temperature sensing with high thermal and spatial resolutions. The results presented in this work may be particularly important for industrial applications, such as metallurgy, catalysis, high-temperature synthesis, materials processing and engineering, and so forth, which require rapid, contactless temperature monitoring at extreme conditions.

8.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(36): 40475-40485, 2020 Sep 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32805851

RESUMEN

The growing interest in the miniaturization of various devices and conducting experiments under extreme conditions of pressure and temperature causes the need for the development of small, contactless, precise, and accurate optical sensors without any electrical connections. In this work, YF3:Yb3+-Er3+ upconverting microparticles are used as a bifunctional luminescence sensor for simultaneous temperature and pressure measurements. Different changes in the properties of Er3+ green and red upconverted luminescence, after excitation of Yb3+ ions in the near-infrared at ∼975 nm, are used to calibrate pressure and/or temperature inside the hydrostatic chamber of a diamond anvil cell (DAC). For temperature sensing, changes in the relative intensities of the Er3+ green upconverted luminescence of 2H11/2 and 4S3/2 thermally coupled multiplets to the 4I15/2 ground state, whose relative populations follow a Boltzmann distribution, are calibrated. For pressure sensing, the spectral shift of the Er3+ upconverted red emission peak at ∼665 nm, between the Stark sublevels of the 4F9/2 → 4I15/2 transition, is used. Experiments performed under simultaneous extreme conditions of pressure, up to ∼8 GPa, and temperature, up to ∼473 K, confirm the possibility of remote optical pressure and temperature sensing.

9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(4): 4131-4138, 2019 Jan 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30615827

RESUMEN

A novel, contactless optical sensor of pressure based on the luminescence red-shift and bandwidth (full width at half-maximum, fwhm) of the Ce3+-doped fluorapatite-Y6Ba4(SiO4)6F2 powder has been successfully synthesized via a facile solid-state method. The obtained material exhibits a bright blue emission under UV light excitation. It was characterized using powder X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy and luminescence spectroscopy, including high-pressure measurements of excitation and emission spectra, up to above ∼30 GPa. Compression of the material resulted in a significant red-shift of the allowed 4f → 5d and 5d → 4f transitions of Ce3+ in the excitation and emission spectra, respectively. The pressure-induced monotonic shift of the emission band, as well as changes in the excitation/emission band widths, have been correlated with pressure for sensing purposes. The material exhibits a high pressure sensitivity (dλ/d P ≈ 0.63 nm/GPa) and outstanding signal intensity at high-pressure conditions (∼90% of the initial intensity at around 20 GPa) with minimal pressure-induced quenching of luminescence.

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