Monitoring the temperature distribution within a local environment at the micro and nanoscale is vital as many processes are solely thermal. Various thermometric techniques have been explored in the community, and out of these, fluorescent nano/micro particle-based mechanisms are accepted widely (fluorescence intensity ratio (FIR) techniques, where the ratio of populations in two consecutive energy levels is compared with Boltzmann distribution). We describe a new technique to account for the temperature rise near an illuminated upconverting particle (UCP) using wavefront imaging, which is more sensitive than the conventional thermometric techniques on the microscale. We rely on a thermo-optical phase microscopic technique by reconstructing the wavefront of emission from an upconverting particle using a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor. The wavefront maps the local phase distribution, which is an indicator of the surroundings' optical parameters, particularly the suspended medium's temperature-induced refractive index in the presence of convection currents. We describe how these extracted phase values can provide information about the optical heating due to the particle and hence its local environment along the direction of the emission. Our findings demonstrate the detection of a minimum temperature rise of 0.23 K, while the FIR methods indicate a minimum of 0.3 K rise. This technique is used to study the temperature increase in the backscattered direction for an upconverting particle illuminated on pump resonance. We also estimate the Soret coefficient for an upconverting particle optically trapped on pump resonance and experiencing anisotropic heating across the body.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.514938 | DOI Listing |
Sensors (Basel)
December 2024
Research Group for Implantable Microsystems, Faculty of Information Technology & Bionics, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, H-1083 Budapest, Hungary.
The aim of this work is to incorporate lanthanide-cored upconversion nanoparticles (UCNP) into the surface of microengineered biomedical implants to create a spatially controlled and optically releasable model drug delivery device in an integrated fashion. Our approach enables silicone-based microelectrocorticography (ECoG) implants holding platinum/iridium recording sites to serve as a stable host of UCNPs. Nanoparticles excitable in the near-infrared (lower energy) regime and emitting visible (higher energy) light are utilized in a study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale
December 2024
Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela, 769008, India.
As nanocrystalline materials exhibit complex disorders, assessment of the local disorder at the nanoscale induced by implanted lattice defects plays a crucial role in understanding the structure-function relationship in these materials. In this report, a comprehensive structural analysis was performed on upconverting nanocrystals (UCNCs) of NaYF/Nd/Yb/Tm, containing varying concentrations of Li to induce deliberate lattice defects. Subsequently, a comprehensive structural analysis of the UCNCs was performed using synchrotron radiation-based high-resolution X-ray diffraction (HRXRD), high-energy total angle scattering coupled with pair distribution function (PDF) analysis, neutron diffraction (ND) and EXAFS probing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Soc Rev
December 2024
Institute of Low Temperature and Structure Research, Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. Okolna 2, 50-422 Wroclaw, Poland.
Photon avalanche (PA)-where the absorption of a single photon initiates a 'chain reaction' of additional absorption and energy transfer events within a material-is a highly nonlinear optical process that results in upconverted light emission with an exceptionally steep dependence on the illumination intensity. Over 40 years following the first demonstration of photon avalanche emission in lanthanide-doped bulk crystals, PA emission has been achieved in nanometer-scale colloidal particles. The scaling of PA to nanomaterials has resulted in significant and rapid advances, such as luminescence imaging beyond the diffraction limit of light, optical thermometry and force sensing with (sub)micron spatial resolution, and all-optical data storage and processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Dis Poverty
December 2024
Leiden University Center of Infectious Diseases, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Background: Detection of infection with Mycobacterium leprae allows timely prophylactic treatment, thereby reducing transmission as well as the risk of permanent, leprosy-associated nerve damage. However, since there is no worldwide-implemented standard test for M. leprae infection, detection of infection in asymptomatic individuals remains a major challenge for control programs in endemic areas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreparation of highly active core-shell/hybrid materials based on up-converting particles combined with semiconductors for photocatalytic application usually requires sophisticated and multi-step synthesis procedures. We propose a new design of a highly efficient NIR-driven photocatalytic system composed of spatially separated thin films of upconverting NaYF:Yb,Tm particles (UCPs), and TiO. Several samples of UCPs were prepared in the form of thin films and suspensions, directly coated with a titania layer or mixed with P25.
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