Structure-dependent luminescence of Eu3+-doped strontium vanadates synthesized with different V : Sr ratios – application in WLEDs and ultra-sensitive optical thermometry†
Abstract
This work mainly focused on luminescence color tuning, white light generation and ultra-sensitive temperature sensing based on complex strontium vanadates doped with Eu3+ ions. A series of materials whose crystal structure changes from orthorhombic SrCO3, through hexagonal Sr5V3O13 and trigonal Sr3V2O8 to triclinic Sr2V2O7 were obtained via a modified sol–gel method, using altered vanadate to strontium ion ratios (V : Sr). Changes in the charge transfer band (CTB), characteristics of the Eu3+ ion emission and luminescence intensity changes were observed with an increasing content of vanadate groups in the materials. Dual-mode, excitation-dependent luminescence, white (λex = 345 nm) and red (λex = 393 nm), is observed. The luminescence color, chromaticity coordinates, color purity, quantum efficiency and emission correlated color temperature (CCT) of materials were compared. The application of the optimized Sr3V2O8:2%Eu3+ material as a multimodal temperature sensor is discussed. Temperature-dependent luminescence properties are investigated and an optical thermometer with high sensitivity is developed, revealing that the material has an extremely high spectral shift with a temperature of up to ∼0.862 nm K−1, currently classifying it as the most sensitive shift-based optical thermometer. Additionally, thanks to the capability of the developed phosphors for efficient energy conversion, we demonstrated their applicability in white-light generation for LED devices.