4.6 Article

Ho3+-Based Luminescent Thermometer for Sensitive Sensing over a Wide Temperature Range

Journal

ADVANCED OPTICAL MATERIALS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adom.202001518

Keywords

cross‐ relaxation; holmium; lanthanide luminescence; luminescence thermometry; remote thermometry

Funding

  1. Netherlands Center for Multiscale Catalytic Energy Conversion (MCEC), an NWO Gravitation Programme - Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science of the Government of The Netherlands
  2. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research NWO [Veni-722.017.002, OCENW.KLEIN.008]
  3. National Science Foundation of China [U1601205, 51472088, 51125005]
  4. EU-Horizon 2020 FET-Open project NanoTBTech [801305]

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The use of Ho3+-based thermometers allows for reliable temperature measurements over a wide temperature range, with bright green and red luminescence properties showing strong dependence on temperature and Ho3+ concentration. The model predicts the output spectrum at different temperatures and concentrations, helping determine the optimum Ho3+ concentration for measurements in any temperature range of interest.
Luminescence thermometry is used in a variety of research fields for noninvasive temperature sensing. Lanthanide-doped micro-/nanocrystals are exceptionally suitable for this. The popular concept of luminescence-intensity-ratio thermometry is based on emission from thermally coupled levels in a single lanthanide ion, following Boltzmann's law. These thermometers can measure temperature with low uncertainty, but only in a limited temperature range. In this work, a Ho3+-based thermometer is presented and quantitatively modeled with sustained low temperature uncertainty from room temperature up to 873 K. The thermometer shows bright green and red luminescence with a strong and opposite dependence on temperature and Ho3+ concentration. This is the result of temperature-dependent competition between multi-phonon relaxation and energy transfer, feeding the green- and red-emitting levels, respectively, following excitation with blue light. This simple and quantitative model of this competition predicts the output spectrum over a wide range of temperatures (300-873 K) and Ho3+ concentrations (0.1-30%). The optimum Ho3+ concentration can thus be determined for reliable measurements over any temperature range of interest. Quantitative modeling as presented here is crucial to optimally benefit from the potential of energy-transfer thermometers to achieve low measurement uncertainties over a wide temperature range.

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