4.3 Article

Antithermal Quenching and Multiparametric Temperature Sensing from Mn2+/Tb3+-Codoped Ca2LaTaO6 Phosphor

Journal

ADVANCED PHOTONICS RESEARCH
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adpr.202300106

Keywords

broadbands; lifetime-based thermometers; luminescence intensity ratios; multiparametric readouts; tunable emission

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A thermal-activated electron compensation Mn2+- and Tb3+-codoped Ca2LaTaO6 phosphor is developed for accurate high-temperature sensing. It exhibits antithermal quenching emission of Tb3+ due to the replenishment of attenuated emission caused by thermal quenching through the deep electron trap states induced by Mn2+ dopant. The luminescence intensity ratio (LIR) and lifetime-based thermometry are designed to improve the accuracy of temperature measurement. Evaluation: 8/10.
Luminescence thermometry plays significant roles in various fields including industrial production, environmental detection, aerospace, and medicine. However, its accuracy improvement remains highly challenging due to the thermal quenching effect of phosphors. Herein, for the first time, a thermal-activated electron compensation Mn2+- and Tb3+-codoped Ca2LaTaO6 phosphor is developed for multiparametric temperature sensing with tunable emission of Mn2+ and antithermal quenching emission of Tb3+, leading to excellent accuracy at high temperatures. By virtue of the deep electron trap states induced by Mn2+ dopant, the electrons in the deep trap can be thermally activated at high temperatures, which can replenish the attenuated Tb3+ emission caused by thermal quenching, thus bringing out the antithermal quenching phenomenon. On account of the prominent emission properties, the luminescence intensity ratio (LIR) readout and lifetime-based thermometry are designed, providing a maximum relative sensitivity S-R of 3.603% and 1.941% K-1, respectively. Multiparametric temperature sensing and novel data analysis are also employed to further improve the accuracy of the luminescence thermometer. The outstanding relative thermal sensitivity ranging from 8.72% to 16.11% K-1 and temperature uncertainty order of 10(-3) are achieved. These results demonstrate that the designed Ca2LaTaO6:Mn2+/Tb3+ phosphor material is a promising thermal-sensing candidate.

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