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Lanthanide doped luminescence nanothermometers in the biological windows: strategies and applications

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages 7913-7987

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0nr09150b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Government (AEI/FEDER, UE) [MAT2016-75716-C2-1-R]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017SGR755, 2017FI_B00620, 2018FI_B100161, 2019 FI_B2 00154]

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The development of lanthanide-doped non-contact luminescent nanothermometers has led to their use as accurate, efficient and fast diagnostic tools, replacing conventional contact thermal probes, due to their versatility, stability and narrow emission band profiles. These nanothermometers utilize lanthanide-doped materials as temperature nanosensors, excited by UV, visible or NIR light, emitting in the I-BW, II-BW, III-BW and IV-BW regions, showing advantages such as reduced phototoxicity and photobleaching, improved image contrast and deeper tissue penetration. Factors affecting the thermal sensitivity and temperature resolution of lanthanide ion-doped nanomaterials in biomedical applications are summarized, along with strategies to boost their sensing properties in each biological window.
The development of lanthanide-doped non-contact luminescent nanothermometers with accuracy, efficiency and fast diagnostic tools attributed to their versatility, stability and narrow emission band profiles has spurred the replacement of conventional contact thermal probes. The application of lanthanide-doped materials as temperature nanosensors, excited by ultraviolet, visible or near infrared light, and the generation of emissions lying in the biological window regions, I-BW (650 nm-950 nm), II-BW (1000 nm-1350 nm), III-BW (1400 nm-2000 nm) and IV-BW (centered at 2200 nm), are notably growing due to the advantages they present, including reduced phototoxicity and photobleaching, better image contrast and deeper penetration depths into biological tissues. Here, the different mechanisms used in lanthanide ion-doped nanomaterials to sense temperature in these biological windows for biomedical and other applications are summarized, focusing on factors that affect their thermal sensitivity, and consequently their temperature resolution. Comparing the thermometric performance of these nanomaterials in each biological window, we identified the strategies that allow boosting of their sensing properties.

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