4.8 Article

Lanthanide Upconverted Luminescence for Simultaneous Contactless Optical Thermometry and Manometry-Sensing under Extreme Conditions of Pressure and Temperature

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 36, Pages 40475-40485

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c09882

Keywords

noncontact optical pressure and temperature sensors; upconversion emission in lanthanide-doped materials; micron-sized YF3:Yb3+-Er3+ particles; bifunctional luminescence thermometer-manometer

Funding

  1. European Union through the European Social Fund under the Operational Program Knowledge Education Development [POWR.03.02.00-00-I023/17]
  2. Polish National Science Centre [2016/23/D/ST4/00296, 2016/21/B/ST5/00110]
  3. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (MICIIN) under the National Program of Sciences and Technological Materials [PID2019-106383GB-C44]
  4. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) under the Spanish National Program of Materials [MAT2016-75586-C4-4-P]
  5. Agencia Canaria de Investigacion, Innovacion y Sociedad de la Informacion ACIISI [ProID2017010078]
  6. Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The growing interest in the miniaturization of various devices and conducting experiments under extreme conditions of pressure and temperature causes the need for the development of small, contactless, precise, and accurate optical sensors without any electrical connections. In this work, YF3:Yb3+-Er3+ upconverting microparticles are used as a bifunctional luminescence sensor for simultaneous temperature and pressure measurements. Different changes in the properties of Er3+ green and red upconverted luminescence, after excitation of Yb3+ ions in the near-infrared at similar to 975 nm, are used to calibrate pressure and/or temperature inside the hydrostatic chamber of a diamond anvil cell (DAC). For temperature sensing, changes in the relative intensities of the Er3+ green upconverted luminescence of H-2(11/2) and S-4(3/2) thermally coupled multiplets to the I-4(15/2) ground state, whose relative populations follow a Boltzmann distribution, are calibrated. For pressure sensing, the spectral shift of the Er3+ upconverted red emission peak at similar to 665 nm, between the Stark sublevels of the F-4(9/2) -> I-4(15/2) transition, is used. Experiments performed under simultaneous extreme conditions of pressure, up to similar to 8 GPa, and temperature, up to similar to 473 K, confirm the possibility of remote optical pressure and temperature sensing.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available