4.3 Article

Noninvasive Temperature Measurement in Dental Materials Using Nd3+, Yb3+ Doped Nanoparticles Emitting in the Near Infrared Region

Journal

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/ppsc.201900445

Keywords

dental materials; luminescence thermometry; near-infrared photoluminescence imaging; photopolymerization; rare-earth doped nanoparticles

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61525503/61620106016/61875135/61835009/51672061]
  2. Key Project of Department of Education of Guangdong Province [2015KGJHZ002/2016KCXTD007]
  3. Guangdong Natural Science Foundation [2014A030312008]
  4. Shenzhen Basic Research Project [JCYJ20170412105003520/JCYJ20170818090620324]
  5. Brazilian Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (Project Brazil-China Cooperation in Nanotechnology, Sub-project Biomedical Applications of Nanomaterials) [400011/2016-6]
  6. CNPq
  7. CAPES
  8. FACEPE
  9. INCT of Photonics

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In this work, the application of near infrared (NIR)-emitting NaYbF4:1%Tm3+@NaLuF4:30%Nd3+ core-shell nanoparticles is reported for noninvasive probing and monitoring the temperature during photopolymerization of dental materials. When excited at 808 nm, the synthesized nanoparticles emit NIR photoluminescence (PL) with two distinctive peaks at 865 and 980 nm which correspond to radiative transitions from the doped Nd3+ and Yb3+ ions, respectively. Luminescence intensity ratio between these two bands is found to vary with temperature due to temperature-dependent electronic excitation energy transfer between Nd3+ and Yb3+ ions at the core/shell interface. This finding allows luminescence ratiometric evaluation of the in situ temperature during photopolymerization of resin cement (doped with nanoparticles) in a veneer placement procedure. In addition, the NIR emission also enables PL imaging of the distribution of the adhesive under the veneer. The results highlight that rare-earth ions-doped nanoparticles with both excitation and emission in the NIR spectral range are advantageous for both PL-based nanothermometry and imaging due to the reduced attenuation of NIR light by dental ceramics.

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