posted on 2019-11-14, 21:15authored byChao Mi, Jiajia Zhou, Fan Wang, Gungun Lin, Dayong Jin
Thermally responsive fluorescent nanoparticles can be
constructed
to allow robust, rapid, and noninvasive temperature measurements.
Furthermore, due to their tiny size, they can be used to detect temperature
changes at the nanoscale. In this way, such sensors are ideally suited
to emerging applications including intracellular temperature sensing
and microelectronics failure diagnostics. Despite their potential,
current nanothermometers still suffer from limited sensitivity, dynamic
range, and stability. By introducing thermal enhanced anti-Stokes
emission from a pair of lanthanide ions, ytterbium and neodymium,
we show an increase of more than 1 order of magnitude in both the
sensitivity and the dynamic range when compared to conventional ytterbium
and erbium-codoped nanothermometers. Here, we report heterogeneous
temperature-responsive nanoparticles with a new record of sensitivity
(9.6%/K at room temperature and above 2.3%/K at elevated temperatures
up to 413 K) that can be used for ratiometric thermometry. The heterogeneous
nanostructure design shows that the thermal responses can be fine-tuned
by the controlled growth of nanoparticles. The stability of the ultrasensitive
nanothermometers has enabled long-term noncontact monitoring of local
heat dissipation of a microelectronic device.