Abstract

Lanthanide (Ln3+ )-doped luminescent nanoparticles (NPs) with emission in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) biological window have shown great promise but their applications are currently limited by the low absorption efficiency of Ln3+ owing to the parity-forbidden 4f→4f electronic transition. Herein, we developed a strategy for the controlled synthesis of a new class of NIR-II luminescent nanoprobes based on Ce3+ /Er3+ and Ce3+ /Nd3+ co-doped CaS NPs, which can be effectively excited by using a low-cost blue light-emitting diode chip. Through sensitization by the allowed 4f→5d transition of Ce3+ , intense NIR-II luminescence from Er3+ and Nd3+ with quantum yields of 9.3 % and 7.7 % was achieved, respectively. By coating them with a layer of amphiphilic phospholipids, these NPs exhibit excellent stability in water and can be exploited as sensitive NIR-II luminescent nanoprobes for the accurate detection of an important disease biomarker, xanthine, with a detection limit of 32.0 nm.

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