DOI:
10.1039/C7SC01393K
(Edge Article)
Chem. Sci., 2017,
8, 5050-5056
Manipulating energy transfer in lanthanide-doped single nanoparticles for highly enhanced upconverting luminescence†
Received
7th February 2017
, Accepted 31st March 2017
First published on 21st April 2017
Abstract
Energy transfer (ET) is of fundamental importance in tuning the optical performance of lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs). However, the fine control and manipulation of the ETs particularly for deleterious cross-relaxation type ETs (CR-ETs) in lanthanide-doped UCNPs remains a formidable challenge to date. Herein, we demonstrate a rational design strategy to manipulate the deleterious CR-ETs in lanthanide-doped UCNPs, by fine-tuning the distances at an extremely large length scale (>20 nm) among multiple lanthanide dopants that are simultaneously embedded into one single nanoparticle with specially designed multilayer nanostructures. The successful inhibition of the CR-ETs leads to a significantly enhanced upconversion luminescence signal with an intensity ∼70 times higher than that of co-doped conventional UCNPs. This finding paves a new way for the better control of the ETs in lanthanide-doped nanoparticles, and offers the possibility of constructing a series of promising single-nanocrystal-based anti-counterfeiting barcodes with well-identified UC emission color and lifetime outputs.
Introduction
Trivalent lanthanide (Ln3+)-doped upconversion (UC) nanoparticles (UCNPs) that convert low-energy irradiation into high-energy emission are promising for applications in diverse fields such as biological detection, imaging, therapeutics, multiplexed encoding and three-dimensional full-color displays.1–19 Although recent advances in the synthesis of Ln3+-doped UCNPs have allowed for the fine-tuning of nanoparticle size, composition, morphology, phase, structure as well as UC emission colors, there is still much room for improvement in their UC luminescence efficiency particularly for those UCNPs co-doped with multiple Ln3+ ions.20–30 For instance, limited by their intrinsic electronic configurations, typical UC activators including Er3+, Tm3+ and Ho3+ ions are usually co-doped into the lattices of diverse UCNPs coupled with the sensitizer of Yb3+ ions to yield multicolor emissions spanning from the ultraviolet (UV) to near-infrared (NIR) spectral regions.31,32 However, such a co-doping strategy can inevitably lead to an increase in the overall Ln3+ doping concentration in one single nanoparticle, thereby giving rise to serious concentration quenching of the UC luminescence (ESI Fig. S1†).33 In principle, such UC luminescence quenching occurring at high Ln3+ ion doping levels is primarily associated with the unwanted cross-relaxation type energy transfers (CR-ETs) among the neighboring Ln3+ ions, which may quench the excitation energy and dissipate it non-radiatively as heat in the lattices of the UCNPs and thus result in weak UC emissions.34,35 In this regard, the precise control of such unwanted CR-ETs in the UCNPs holds great promise in getting to the root of the concentration quenching, which hitherto remains a formidable challenge. It is well known that the probability of CR-ETs for two given neighboring Ln3+ ions is strongly dependent on their spatial distance.33 Therefore, the most straightforward and feasible way to manipulate the CR-ETs is to control the distances among the Ln3+ ions that are embedded in one identical nanoparticle. Attempts to solve this problem include lowering the doping concentration of the Ln3+ ions or confining the doped Ln3+ ions in different layers of core–shell structured UCNPs.36–38 However, only a very limited distance between the Ln3+ emitters (typically <5 nm) can be tuned for these two approaches due to their intrinsic limitations such as elemental migration across the core–shell interfaces and the inhomogeneous growth of different shell layers for the core–shell structured UCNPs,36,39,40 which thereby cannot completely minimize the negative effect of the deleterious CR-ETs.
To this end, herein we demonstrate a rational design strategy to fundamentally circumvent the concentration quenching effect that is ubiquitous in Ln3+ ion doped UCNPs. Our strategy is based on manipulating the CR-ETs at an extremely large length scale (>20 nm) through fine-tuning the distances among the Ln3+ dopants that are spatially confined into different layers by inserting thickness-tunable pure host interlayers into one single nanorod with specially designed multilayer structures (Scheme 1). Benefiting from this strategy, unwanted CR-ETs can be effectively eliminated in UCNPs co-doped with multiple Ln3+ ions, resulting in highly enhanced UC emissions when compared to the conventional KSc2F7 UCNPs in which all Ln3+ ions are co-doped together. The significantly enhanced UC luminescence coupled with the flexibility of multilayer structures thereby enable us to fabricate a series of color-tunable UC nanorods that can serve as promising single-nanocrystal-based anti-counterfeiting barcodes with well-identified UC color and lifetime outputs.
|
| Scheme 1 Schematic design of a multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorod comprising different Yb/X pairs separately incorporated in layers and thickness-tunable pure KSc2F7 interlayers to manipulate CR-ETs in one single nanorod for highly enhanced UC luminescence. | |
Experimental section
Chemicals and materials
CF3COOH, Ln2O3 (Ln = Sc, Y, Gd, Yb, Er, Ho and Tm), Ln(CH3COO)3·4H2O, CF3COOK·H2O, oleic acid (OA), oleylamine (OM), and 1-octadecence (ODE) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (China). Ln(CF3COO)3·4H2O was prepared as reported in the literature.41 Polystyrene beads (9.0–9.9 μm) were purchased from Aladdin Reagent Co., Ltd. 1-Butanol, dichloromethane, cyclohexane, NaOH, NH4F, and ethanol were purchased from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., China. Unless otherwise noted, all of the chemical reagents were used as received without further purification.
Structural and optical characterization
Powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns of the samples were collected using an X-ray diffractometer (MiniFlex2, Rigaku) with Cu Kα1 radiation (λ = 0.154187 nm). Representative transmission electron microscopy (TEM), high angle annular dark-field scanning TEM (HAADF-STEM) and electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) analyses were conducted using a TECNAI G2F20 TEM. The hydrodynamic diameter distribution for the ligand-free KSc2F7 nanorods dispersed in aqueous solution (pH 6.9) was determined by means of dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurement (Nano ZS ZEN3600, Malvern). UC luminescence spectra were measured upon 980 nm NIR excitation from a continuous-wave diode laser. UC luminescence decays were measured with a customized UV to mid-infrared steady-state and phosphorescence lifetime spectrometer (FSP920-C, Edinburgh Instrument) equipped with a digital oscilloscope (TDS3052B, Tektronix) and a tunable mid-band Optical Parametric Oscillator (OPO) pulse laser as the excitation source (410–2400 nm, 10 Hz, pulse width ≤ 5 ns, Vibrant 355II, OPOTEK). All of the UC luminescence decay curves were fitted using a double exponential function unless otherwise noted. The absolute UC quantum yields (QYs) for the samples were measured with a customized UC luminescence spectroscopy system at room temperature with a 980 nm diode laser (LSR-PS-II, Lasever. Inc) excitation at power densities of 20–50 W cm−2, and the UC emission peaks from the Er3+, Ho3+ and Tm3+ ions in the spectral range of 300–850 nm were integrated for the QY determination. All of the spectral data were corrected for the spectral responses of both the spectrometer and the integrating sphere. UC luminescence microscopy images for polystyrene microbeads loaded with diverse multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods were obtained on a Nikon ECLIPSE Ti-U microscope with a Nikon digital sight DS-Ri1 CCD imaging system. UC luminescence photographs for the 2D code, multicolored sketch and the Arabic numbers of “123456” were printed/handwritten onto a piece of A4 paper using our multilayer-structured nanorods as UC security ink and were taken with a Canon 70D digital camera, where a short pass filter of 750 nm was placed in the front of the camera to filter the 980 nm excitation light.
General procedure for the preparation of KSc2F7:Ln precursors
In a typical procedure, CF3COOK·H2O and Ln(CF3COO)3·4H2O, at a designated K/Ln mole ratio of 1:2, were first mixed with OA, ODE and OM with a volume ratio of 3:2:1 in a 250 mL three-neck round-bottom flask, then heated at 150 °C for 30 min under a N2 flow to form a clear yellowish solution, and then cooled down to room temperature naturally for the following use. It should be noted that the Ln ion, the Ln amount as well as the total solvent volume should be adjusted according to the structure of the synthesized multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods.
General procedure for the synthesis of multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods
The synthesis of the multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods was conducted using a modified stepwise layer-by-layer oriented epitaxial growth protocol of thermal decomposition.42 Taking the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods with a pure KSc2F7 interlayer thickness of ∼10.3 nm as an example, 0.5 mmol of CF3COOK·H2O, 0.79 mmol of Sc(CF3COO)3·4H2O, 0.2 mmol of Yb(CF3COO)3·4H2O and 0.01 mmol of Tm(CF3COO)3·4H2O were first added to a 500 mL three-neck round-bottom flask containing 15 mL of OA, 10 mL of ODE and 5 mL of OM, and then heated at 150 °C under a N2 flow with constant stirring for 30 min to remove the water from the raw materials. The obtained mixture was heated to 300 °C under a N2 flow with constant stirring and all conditions were maintained for 30 min to obtain KSc2F7:Yb/Tm seed nanorods. After retrieving 1 mL of the reaction mixture for TEM analysis, 24 mL of pure KSc2F7 interlayer precursors with a calculated amount of ∼0.5 mmol was immediately injected into the reaction mixture and ripened at 300 °C for 30 min, followed by the similar injection and ripening cycles being performed three times. Subsequently, the KSc2F7:Yb/Er, pure KSc2F7, KSc2F7:Yb/Ho and pure KSc2F7 precursors were injected and ripened in turn by using the identical injection and ripening cycles aforementioned to prepare Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods with the following nanostructures: KSc2F7:Yb/Tm@KSc2F7@KSc2F7:Yb/Er@KSc2F7@KSc2F7:Yb/Ho@KSc2F7. After naturally cooling down to room temperature, the obtained multilayer-structured nanorods were precipitated by the addition of ethanol, collected by centrifugation at 8000 rpm for 5 min, washed with ethanol several times, and finally re-dispersed in cyclohexane. By adjusting the orders and the Ln ion in the injected KSc2F7:Ln precursors, prepared as above, a series of KSc2F7 nanorods with distinct multilayer nanostructures can be readily obtained using similar synthesis procedures. It should be noted that the thickness of each layer in the multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods can be tuned by changing the injected overall amount of corresponding Ln precursors.
Results and discussion
In our design, orthorhombic-phase KSc2F7 was chosen as the host material for the synthesis of the color-tunable UC nanorods due to its ability to yield one-dimensional nanorods.43,44 Three typical sets of UC sensitizer/activator pairs of Yb3+/X3+ (X = Tm, Ho and Er) at precisely defined concentrations (ESI Fig. S2†) were separately incorporated into different layers of one single KSc2F7 nanorod to render the blue, green and red UC emissions via a modified stepwise oriented epitaxial growth method of thermal decomposition.42 Specifically, pure KSc2F7 interlayers with controllable thicknesses were intentionally fabricated to spatially separate the layers doped with three different Yb3+/X3+ pairs and thus minimize the energy loss induced by the unwanted CR-ETs (Scheme 1). As a result, monodisperse and uniform Ln3+-doped KSc2F7 nanorods with multilayer nanostructures like KSc2F7:Yb/Tm@KSc2F7@KSc2F7:Yb/Er@KSc2F7@KSc2F7:Yb/Ho@KSc2F7 (denoted as Tm@Er@Ho@Pure) were readily obtained in gram quantity (∼1.5 g) by a one-pot reaction with a yield as high as ∼93% based on the total molar quantities of the starting materials and injected KSc2F7:Ln precursors (ESI Fig. S3†). It should be noted that the outermost pure KSc2F7 layers were also fabricated to exclude the surface quenching effect of the UC emissions as is usually adopted in core–shell structured UCNPs. For comparison, KSc2F7:Yb/Tm@KSc2F7:Yb/Er@KSc2F7:Yb/Ho without pure KSc2F7 interlayers and Yb/Tm/Er/Ho co-doped KSc2F7 (denoted as Tm@Er@Ho and Tm/Er/Ho, respectively) nanorods were also synthesized using similar synthetic procedures.
All the as-synthesized nanorods can be well indexed to be an orthorhombic-phase KSc2F7 crystal structure by XRD analysis (ESI Fig. S4†). Representative TEM images show that the as-synthesized segmented KSc2F7 nanorods have a long rod shape with an average length of 241 ± 12 nm and a width of 25 ± 3 nm (Fig. 1a), and are much longer than KSc2F7 seed nanorods of 150 ± 20 nm in length and 19 ± 3 nm in diameter (Fig. 1b), indicating the successful oriented epitaxial growth of the KSc2F7 nanorods. The corresponding high-resolution TEM image of an individual nanorod exhibits a clear lattice fringe with an observed d-spacing of 0.41 nm for the (001) plane of the orthorhombic KSc2F7 structure (Fig. 1c), revealing that the nanorods grow preferably along the [001] direction of the orthorhombic-phase KSc2F7, as further confirmed by the selected-area electron diffraction pattern of a randomly selected nanorod (Fig. 1d). To shed more light on the multilayer nanostructures, we conducted HAADF-STEM imaging of the as-synthesized nanorods (Fig. 1e). The discernible contrast in the pure KSc2F7 and Yb/X pair co-doped KSc2F7 layers associated with different atomic masses of Yb and Sc clearly demonstrates the formation of multilayer architectures. This finding can be further verified by the EELS analysis conducted on several randomly selected nanorods, in which the varied Sc and Yb content in different regions of the KSc2F7 nanorods is in accordance with the designed compositions of the multilayer nanostructures (Fig. 1f).
|
| Fig. 1 Typical low-resolution TEM images for (a) multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods and (b) as-synthesized KSc2F7 seeds. (c) High-resolution TEM image of a single nanorod and its corresponding (d) selected-area electron diffraction pattern, revealing the single-crystalline nature of the multilayer-structured nanorods. (e) Representative HAADF-STEM image of the multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods, demonstrating the contrast in density between the layers doped with Yb/X pairs and pure KSc2F7 interlayers. (f) EELS line scan conducted with HAADF-STEM imaging (upper) on half of a single nanorod, indicating the varied Sc and Yb content in different regions of the KSc2F7 nanorods that is in good consistency with the designed compositions of the multilayer nanostructure. | |
To demonstrate the feasibility of our design strategy, we first investigated the UC luminescence properties for the as-synthesized nanorods. As shown in Fig. 2a, upon 980 nm diode laser irradiation at a power density of 50 W cm−2, the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods display characteristic UC emission peaks centered at 480, 554, 650, 752 and 792 nm, which can be attributed to the intra-4f transitions of Tm3+, Er3+ (Ho3+), Er3+ (Ho3+), Tm3+ ions, respectively. In particular, the total integrated UC emission intensities for the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure and Tm@Er@Ho nanorods were found to be remarkably enhanced by a factor of about 70 and 30 as compared to the Tm/Er/Ho counterparts, respectively (Fig. 2b), which unambiguously reveals that the pure KSc2F7 interlayer plays a dominant role in enhancing the UC luminescence efficiency for these multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods. Consistently, the absolute UC QYs were observed to increase markedly from 0.2% for the Tm/Er/Ho nanorods to 1.9% for the Tm@Er@Ho nanorods and to 3.9% for the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods upon 980 nm laser excitation at a power density of 50 W cm−2 (ESI Table S1†). To the best of our knowledge, such a high UC QY of 3.9% particularly for Yb/Tm/Er/Ho co-doped UCNPs has not yet been achieved before, and is found to be even higher than those of the well-established Yb/Er doped UC NaYF4 bulks or nanomaterials measured at the same laser excitation power density (ESI Table S1†).45 Likewise, such remarkably enhanced UC emissions were also achieved in the KSc2F7 nanorods doped with one or two pairs of Yb3+/X3+ (ESI Fig. S5 and S6†). Furthermore, we would like to emphasize that these multilayer-structured nanorods also outperform the mixture of three Yb/X-only doped KSc2F7 nanorods with almost identical lengths to the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods in terms of UC emission intensity and lifetime (ESI Fig. S7†), thereby clearly demonstrating the overwhelming advantages of the multilayer-structured design strategy over the conventional co-doping method in producing intense UC luminescence.
|
| Fig. 2 Comparison of (a) UC emission spectra and (b) their corresponding integrated intensities for the Tm/Er/Ho, Tm@Er@Ho and Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods upon 980 nm excitation at a power density of 50 W cm−2. (c) Proposed mechanism for CR-ET inhibition among the Tm3+, Er3+ and Ho3+ ions in one single nanorod through fine-tuning the thickness (R) of the pure KSc2F7 interlayer. It should be noted that only partial energy levels and CR-ETs for the Tm, Er, and Ho ions are shown for clarity, and the dashed two end arrows represent the CR-ET processes. (d) UC luminescence decay curves of Tm emission centered at 792 nm upon 980 nm pulsed laser excitation in the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure (blue), Tm@Er@Ho (red) and Tm/Er/Ho (black) nanorods. | |
We attribute such highly enhanced UC properties to the successful inhibition of unwanted CR-ETs among Tm3+, Er3+ and Ho3+ ions across a large spatial distance resulting from the pure KSc2F7 interlayers of the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods which we intentionally fabricated. For the Tm/Er/Ho nanorods possessing a much smaller spatial distance in each dopant, the quenching of the UC luminescence is inevitable, due to the existence of severe CR-ETs among adjacent activators, leading to a much lower UC efficiency than those of the multilayer-structured nanorods. In contrast, those deleterious CR-ETs among Tm3+, Er3+ and Ho3+ ions such as 5G4, 5S2 → 5I7 (Ho):3H6 → 3H4 (Tm), 5G4, 5S2 → 5I8 (Ho):4I15/2 → 4S3/2 (Er), and 1G4 → 3F4 (Tm):4I15/2 → 4F9/2 (Er) can be effectively eliminated owing to the large activator-to-activator separation (R) isolated by the pure KSc2F7 interlayers within the multilayer-structured nanorods (Fig. 2c).38,46–48 Therefore, highly enhanced UC emissions with much better photo-stability were detected in the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods in comparison with their directly co-doped counterparts, as evidenced by the observation of easy burning in the directly co-doped nanorods upon 980 nm diode laser irradiation at a power density higher than ∼100 W cm−2 (ESI Fig. S8†).
The successful inhibition of those unwanted CR-ETs can be further validated by UC luminescence decay studies. An increase in the Ln3+ UC lifetime is considered to be an explicit and convincing indicator for the suppression of CR-ETs, which certainly decreases the non-radiative relaxation rates of the excited energy levels of Ln3+ ions.49 As anticipated, all of the UC lifetimes for the Tm, Er and Ho ions in the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods were measured to be much longer than those in the Tm/Er/Ho and Tm@Er@Ho counterparts (ESI Fig. S9†). For instance, the mean UC lifetime for the 3H4 → 3H6 transition of Tm3+ in the Tm@Er@Ho@Pure nanorods was determined to be 1.34 ms, which is approximately 27 and 9 times longer than those in the Tm/Er/Ho (0.05 ms) and Tm@Er@Ho (0.15 ms) nanorods (Fig. 2d). To further verify the necessity of the pure KSc2F7 interlayer that separates different Yb3+/X3+ pairs from each other at an extremely large length scale for efficient UC luminescence, we synthesized the Tm/Er/Ho and the Yb/Er co-doped KSc2F7 nanorods with different lengths of ∼150 and ∼200 nm and diameters of ∼17 and ∼23 nm as the control (Fig. 3a and b and S10†). Both the UC emission intensity and the lifetime for the Tm/Er/Ho and the Yb/Er co-doped KSc2F7 nanorods were observed to remain essentially unchanged regardless of their varied nanorod lengths and diameters (Fig. 3c and S10 and S11†), which differs markedly from the core–shell structured UCNPs with size-dependent UC luminescence (ESI Fig. S12†), and thereby ruling out the possibility that the enhanced UC luminescence arises from the increased Ln3+ emitters with the increase in length and diameter of the nanorods. Taken together, these results provide clear evidence that the pure KSc2F7 interlayers in the KSc2F7 nanorods play a dominant role in eliminating the deleterious CR-ETs for highly enhanced UC luminescence.
|
| Fig. 3 (a and b) TEM images of two types of Tm/Er/Ho nanorods with different lengths of ∼150 and ∼200 nm and diameters of ∼17 and ∼23 nm, and their corresponding (c) UC emission spectra upon 980 nm excitation at a power density of 50 W cm−2. | |
Under a dipole–dipole interaction, the probability (Ws–a) for the CR-ETs between two given neighboring Ln3+ ions (provided that one Ln3+ ion acts as a sensitizer and the other one serves as an activator) is proportional to the inverse of the sixth power of their spatial distance (Rs–a) and can be expressed as:50,51
where
Rs–a,
n,
fa,
ηs and
τsf are the sensitizer–activator distance, refractive index, oscillator strength, quantum efficiency and the intrinsic luminescence lifetime of sensitizer;
represents the average frequency in the overlap spectral region between the emission of the sensitizer and the absorption of the activator, and
Oin is the overlap integral between the sensitizer emission and the activator absorption spectra. Therefore, we can deduce that the sensitizer–activator distance is one of the most critical parameters governing the CR-ETs for two given Ln
3+ ions. To better understand the relationship between the UC luminescence and
Rs–a, we have synthesized a series of KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7@KSc
2F
7:Yb/Er@KSc
2F
7 and KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7@KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7 (hereafter referred to as Tm@Er@Pure and Tm@Tm@Pure, respectively) nanorods with a pure KSc
2F
7 interlayer thickness ranging from 0 to ∼21.3 nm and diameter from ∼8 to ∼15 nm (
Fig. 4a–f and ESI Fig. S13 and 14
†). The integrated UC emission intensities for both the Tm@Er@Pure and the Tm@Tm@Pure nanorods are observed to rise first with increasing the thickness of the pure KSc
2F
7 interlayer (0–10.3 nm) and then exhibit a gradual decrease upon further increasing the interlayer thickness (
Fig. 4g and ESI Fig. S15
†). In this sense, for a successful inhibition of CR-ETs, the optimum thickness of the pure interlayer is estimated to be ∼10.3 nm in the KSc
2F
7 nanorods. The initial enhancement in the UC emission intensity is conceivable due to the stepwise suppressed CR-ETs between the Er
3+ and Tm
3+ ions in view of the gradually increased interlayer thickness, whereas the subsequent decrease in the UC emission intensity is primarily associated with the reduced overall doping concentrations of the Tm and Er ions that deviate from their optimum values in the KSc
2F
7 nanorods owing to the excessive growth of the pure KSc
2F
7 interlayer. This explanation is strongly supported by the step-by-step prolonged UC lifetimes for both Er and Tm ions in the Tm@Er@Pure or Tm@Tm@Pure nanorods when the interlayer thickness increased from 0 to ∼21.3 nm (
Fig. 4h and ESI Fig. S15 and S16
†). To rule out the possibility that the enhanced UC emissions in the Tm@Er@Pure nanorods are primarily due to the outmost pure KSc
2F
7 protection layer, we compared the integrated UC emission intensities of the KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7:Yb/Er (without the pure KSc
2F
7 interlayer and outmost protection layer), KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7:Yb/Er@KSc
2F
7 (only with the outmost pure KSc
2F
7 protection layer of ∼10.3 nm) and Tm@Er@Pure nanorods with a pure KSc
2F
7 interlayer thickness of ∼10.3 and the outmost protection layer of ∼5 nm (ESI Fig. S17
†). The UC luminescence intensity of the Tm@Er@Pure nanorods was determined to be 8.6 and 3.7 times stronger than those of the KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7:Yb/Er and KSc
2F
7:Yb/Tm@KSc
2F
7:Yb/Er@KSc
2F
7 nanorods, respectively, further demonstrating the dominant role of the pure KSc
2F
7 interlayer in improving the UC luminescence efficiency.
|
| Fig. 4 (a–f) TEM images for the Tm@Er@Pure nanorods with the pure KSc2F7 interlayer (R) ranging from 0 to ∼21.3 nm, and (g) their corresponding UC emission spectra. The inset of (g) shows the dependence of the integrated UC emission intensity on the thickness of the pure KSc2F7 interlayer. (h) UC lifetimes for the Er and Tm emissions centered at 650 and 480 nm as a function of the thickness of the pure KSc2F7 interlayer in the Tm@Er@Pure nanorods. | |
Based on the optimized interlayer thickness, we can fabricate a myriad of KSc2F7 nanorods doped with different Yb3+/X3+ pairs free of the negative effect of CR-ETs. By adjusting the Yb3+/X3+ doping combinations and locations (marked by a, b and c) in the multilayer-structured nanorods, overall 64 (that is, 4 × 4 × 4) kinds of KSc2F7 nanorods can be obtained with tunable UC emission outputs spanning from blue to red (ESI Fig. S18†), as indicated by the UC emission photographs of the polystyrene microbeads after loading with diverse multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods (Fig. 5a–h and ESI Fig. S19†). Considering the diversity and flexibility of the multilayer nanostructures that we specially designed, these KSc2F7 nanorods may show great promise in applications as a new class of single-nanocrystal-based UC barcode for advanced anti-counterfeiting, which can greatly circumvent the deficiencies of those previously reported microcrystal-based UC barcodes utilizing merely two tips of NaYF4 microrods for encoding and thus are expected to be more difficult to replicate in practical anti-counterfeiting applications.52,53 As a proof-of-concept experiment, we printed a 2D code and a multicolored sketch, or handwrote the Arabic numbers of “123456” onto a piece of A4 paper using well-dispersed water-soluble blue-, green-, yellow-, orange- and red-emitting nanorods as UC security ink (ESI Fig. S20†). After naturally drying under ambient conditions, the patterns of the 2D code, sketch and Arabic numbers are almost invisible to the naked eye in daylight or upon irradiation with a 365 nm UV lamp (Fig. 5i). In contrast, all of them with blue to red UC emissions can be clearly distinguished on A4 paper when excited with a 980 nm NIR diode laser (Fig. 5j–l), thereby demonstrating the practicability of the multilayer-structured nanorods we developed to combat counterfeiting. As an added benefit, these nanorods can also be exploited as UC lifetime-tunable security ink by virtue of their varied UC decays from different Ln3+ ions embedded in the distinct layers of the KSc2F7 nanorods (ESI Fig. S21†).
|
| Fig. 5 (a) Schematic illustration and (b) typical SEM image of polystyrene microbeads loaded with diverse multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods, demonstrating the diversity of the UC color outputs from (c–h) blue to red under 980 nm diode laser irradiation (scale bar is 10 μm). UC photographs of the 2D code, multicolored sketch and Arabic numbers “123456” that were printed or handwritten on a piece of A4 paper using blue-, green-, yellow-, orange- and red-emitting multilayer-structured KSc2F7 nanorods as UC security ink in (i) daylight (or upon irradiation with a 365 nm UV lamp) and (j–l) upon 980 nm diode laser irradiation in the dark. | |
Conclusions
In summary, we have demonstrated a unique multilayer-structured strategy to remarkably enhance the UC luminescence of multiple Ln3+ ions embedded in one single nanorod, by manipulating the deleterious CR-ETs among diverse Ln3+ ions. The successful inhibition of the unwanted CR-ETs across the unusually large distance (>20 nm, a distance difficult to tune by the traditional core–shell strategy) allows us to fabricate a series of photo-stable UCNPs with an intensity more than 70 times higher than that of conventional UCNPs directly co-doped with Yb/X pairs. Benefiting from the diversity and flexibility of the multilayer nanostructures, these UCNPs exhibiting a wide range of UC emission color and lifetime outputs can function well as promising single-nanorod-based UC barcodes for advanced anti-counterfeiting. Such a strategy, paving a new way towards the precise control of CR-ETs that are ubiquitous in Ln3+-doped UCNPs, can be further generalized for the most promising UC luminescent system of β-NaYF4 (ESI Fig. S22†) and other lanthanide-doped confined systems such as 2D nanofilms or 0D nanodots, thus opening up a new avenue for the exploration of these multilayer-structured UCNPs for applications in displays, biosensing and anti-counterfeiting.
Acknowledgements
This work is supported by the 973 program of MOST (No. 2014CB845605), the NSFC (No. 21390392, 21473205, U1305244 and 21325104), the CAS/SAFEA International Partnership Program for Creative Research Teams, the Strategic Priority Research Program of the CAS (No. XDA09030307 and XDB20000000), the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of CAS, and the Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province (No. 2017I0018, 2017J01038).
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Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Supplementary experimental details, Fig. S1–22 and Table S1. See DOI: 10.1039/c7sc01393k |
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