4.6 Article

A new up-conversion charging concept for effectively charging persistent phosphors using low-energy visible-light laser diodes

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C
Volume 6, Issue 30, Pages 8003-8010

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8tc02419g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR-1403929, DMR-1705707]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51272132, 11774046]
  3. China Scholarship Council

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It is general knowledge in persistent luminescence that high-energy illumination, mostly ultraviolet light, is usually necessary in order to effectively charge persistent phosphors. However, the need for high-energy ultraviolet light excitation compromises some applications. In his pioneering work on ruby (Al2O3:Cr3+) laser materials in 1960, Theodore Maiman observed an excited-state absorption phenomenon under the excitation of a high-intensity green-light flash tube. Inspired by Maiman's observation, here we propose a new two-photon up-conversion charging (UCC) concept to effectiveLy charge Cr3+-activated near-infrared persistent phosphors using low-energy, high-intensity visible-light Laser diodes. As an example, we demonstrate that a low-energy 635 nm Laser diode can produce persistent luminescence in the LiGa5O8:Cr3+ persistent phosphor at the same magnitude as that produced by high-energy 335 nm ultraviolet light from a xenon arc lamp. Moreover, the UCC appears to be a common phenomenon in persistent phosphors containing other UCC-enabling activators such as rare-earth Pr3+ ions and transition metal Mn2+ ions. The UCC technique offers a new way to study persistent luminescence and utilize persistent phosphors; for instance, in bioimaging it makes effective in vivo charging persistent optical probes using tissue-friendly visible Light possible.

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