4.6 Article

Molten-Salt-Assisted Annealing for Making Colloidal ZnGa2O4:Cr Nanocrystals with High Persistent Luminescence

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 27, Issue 44, Pages 11398-11405

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.202101234

Keywords

annealing; colloids; molten salts; nanocrystals; photoluminescence; ZnGa2O4; Cr3+

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [1952803, 1710160]
  2. IIT startup funds
  3. United States-India Education Foundation (USIEF)
  4. Institute of International Education (IIE) [2268/FNPDR/2017]

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A new method of thermally annealing synthesized ZnGa2O4:Cr3+ colloidal nanocrystals in a molten salt medium has been introduced to significantly improve photoluminescence and persistent luminescence intensity without much growth in size. This method provides a novel strategy to design persistent luminescent nanocrystals with high intensity and long duration while maintaining their nanostructural characteristics.
Persistent luminescent nanocrystals (PLNCs) in the sub-10 nm domain are considered to be the most fascinating inventions in lighting technology owing to their excellent performance in anti-counterfeiting, luminous paints, bioimaging, security applications, etc. Further improvement of persistent luminescence (PersL) intensity and lifetime is needed to achieve the desired success of PLNCs while keeping the uniform sub-10 nm size. In this work, the concept of molten salt confinement to thermally anneal as-synthesized ZnGa2O4:Cr3+ (ZGOC) colloidal NCs (CNCs) in a molten salt medium at 650 degrees C is introduced. This method led to significantly monodispersed and few agglomerated NCs with a much improved photoluminescence (PL) and PersL intensity without much growth in the size of the pristine CNCs. Other strategies such as i) thermal annealing, ii) overcoating, and iii) the core-shell strategy have also been tried to improve PL and PersL but did not improve them simultaneously. Moreover, directly annealing the CNCs in air without the assistance of molten salt could significantly improve both PL and PersL but led to particle heterogeneity and aggregation, which are highly unsuitable for in vivo imaging. We believe this work provides a novel strategy to design PLNCs with high PL intensity and long PersL duration without losing their nanostructural characteristics, water dispersibility and biocompatibility.

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