Nd-Doped TiO Nanoparticles as Nanothermometer: High Sensitivity in Temperature Evaluation inside Biological Windows.

Sensors (Basel)

Chimie des Interactions Plasma-Surface (ChIPS), Research Institute for Materials Science and Engineering, Université de Mons, 7000 Mons, Belgium.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • TiO nanoparticles were synthesized with different concentrations of Nd (0.5, 1, and 3 wt.%) using the sol-gel method and analyzed as potential temperature sensors based on fluorescence intensity ratios of Nd's thermal-sensitive transitions.
  • The study revealed that the nanoparticles exhibited an anatase phase and characteristics of their morphology and composition were confirmed via various microscopy and spectroscopy techniques, showing increased neodymium concentration led to higher titanium levels and enhanced photoluminescence.
  • Temperature experiments showed that photoluminescence intensity varied with Nd transitions, which were utilized to calculate relative sensitivity values for the nanoparticles, indicating potential effectiveness as temperature probes.

Article Abstract

TiO nanoparticles doped with different amounts of Nd (0.5, 1, and 3 wt.%) were synthetized by the sol-gel method, and evaluated as potential temperature nanoprobes using the fluorescence intensity ratio between thermal-sensitive radiative transitions of the Nd. XRD characterization identified the anatase phase in all the doped samples. The morphology of the nanoparticles was observed with SEM, TEM and HRTEM microscopies. The relative amount of Nd in TiO was obtained by EDXS, and the oxidation state of titanium and neodymium was investigated via XPS and NEXAFS, respectively. Nd was present in all the samples, unlike titanium, where besides Ti, a significantly amount of Ti was observed; the relative concentration of Ti increased as the amount of Nd in the TiO nanoparticles increased. The photoluminescence of the synthetized nanoparticles was investigated, with excitation wavelengths of 350, 514 and 600 nm. The emission intensity of the broad band that was associated with the presence of defects in the TiO, increased when the concentration of Nd was increased. Using 600 nm for excitation, the F→I, F→I and F→I transitions of Nd ions, centered at 760 nm, 821 nm, and 880 nm, respectively, were observed. Finally, the effect of temperature in the photoluminescence intensity of the synthetized nanoparticles was investigated, with an excitation wavelength of 600 nm. The spectra were collected in the 288-348 K range. For increasing temperatures, the emission intensity of the F→I and F→I transitions increased significantly, in contrast to the F→I transition, in which the intensity emission decreased. The fluorescence intensity ratio between the transitions I821I880=F5/24I49/2F43/2I49/2 and I760I880=F47/2I49/2F43/2I49/2 were used to calculate the relative sensitivity of the sensors. The relative sensitivity was near 3% K for I760I880 and near 1% K for I821I880.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8399183PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s21165306DOI Listing

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