Abstract
Phosphor-assisted luminescent thermometry relies on studying, often subtle, temperature-dependent spectral properties, such as luminescence spectra, bands shifts, or luminescence lifetimes. Although this is feasible with high-resolution spectrometers or time-resolved detectors, technical implementation of such temperature mapping or wide-field imaging is complex and cumbersome. Therefore, a new approach for noncontact ratiometric temperature detection has been proposed based on comparison of emission properties of bright Cr3+-doped phosphors at single emission band upon two, resonant and nonresonant, optical excitation bands. The proposed method of temperature readout was examined for three different host materials: YAlO3, Y3Al5O12, and LiLaP4O12 nanocrystals. The highest relative sensitivity in physiological temperature range was found for YAlO3 nanocrystals reaching 0.35%/K, which is related to the highest crystal field found for this phosphor. The proposed methodology and the obtained materials enabled to not only reliably measure temperature in the range of -150 to 300 °C but also significantly simplify the technical detection scheme. In consequence, lamp-photoexcited, wide-field, micron-resolution microscopy imaging became possible, which is of special interest for many remote temperature studies in technology and biomedical applications.
Published Version
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