4.8 Article

Hybrid 0D Antimony Halides as Air-Stable Luminophores for High-Spatial-Resolution Remote Thermography

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 33, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202007355

Keywords

metal halide luminescence; remote thermography; thermographic phosphors

Funding

  1. European Union through Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (ERC Consolidator Grant SCALE-HALO) [819740]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [188404]
  3. Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO) via the Innovational Research Incentives (Veni) Scheme [722.017.011]

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Luminescent organic-inorganic low-dimensional ns(2) metal halides, such as TPP2SbBr5, are gaining interest as thermographic phosphors due to their reliable temperature sensing capabilities. The relationship between luminescence characteristics, crystal structure, and microstructure has been studied, highlighting the potential of TPP2SbBr5 for high-spatial-resolution remote thermography with high thermometric precision.
Luminescent organic-inorganic low-dimensional ns(2) metal halides are of rising interest as thermographic phosphors. The intrinsic nature of the excitonic self-trapping provides for reliable temperature sensing due to the existence of a temperature range, typically 50-100 K wide, in which the luminescence lifetimes (and quantum yields) are steeply temperature-dependent. This sensitivity range can be adjusted from cryogenic temperatures to above room temperature by structural engineering, thus enabling diverse thermometric and thermographic applications ranging from protein crystallography to diagnostics in microelectronics. Owing to the stable oxidation state of Sb3+, Sb(III)-based halides are far more attractive than all major non-heavy-metal alternatives (Sn-, Ge-, Bi-based halides). In this work, the relationship between the luminescence characteristics and crystal structure and microstructure of TPP2SbBr5 (TPP = tetraphenylphosphonium) is established, and then its potential is showcased as environmentally stable and robust phosphor for remote thermography. The material is easily processable into thin films, which is highly beneficial for high-spatial-resolution remote thermography. In particular, a compelling combination of high spatial resolution (1 mu m) and high thermometric precision (high specific sensitivities of 0.03-0.04 K-1) is demonstrated by fluorescence-lifetime imaging of a heated resistive pattern on a flat substrate, covered with a solution-spun film of TPP2SbBr5.

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