NATO [grant No. SPS.MYP G5751]

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NATO [grant No. SPS.MYP G5751]

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Double-deconvolution method for the separation of thermalised emissions from chromium-doped lanthanum gallate and its potential in luminescence-based thermometry

Mullins, Abbi L.; Ćirić, Aleksandar; Ristić, Zoran; Williams, J. A. Gareth; Radosavjević Evans, Ivana; Dramićanin, Miroslav

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Mullins, Abbi L.
AU  - Ćirić, Aleksandar
AU  - Ristić, Zoran
AU  - Williams, J. A. Gareth
AU  - Radosavjević Evans, Ivana
AU  - Dramićanin, Miroslav
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://vinar.vin.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/10219
AB  - A series of LaGa1–xO3:Cr3+x phosphors (x = 0.002, 0.005, 0.01, 0.02, 0.04) were synthesised by solid-state reaction and structurally characterised by Rietveld refinement from powder X-ray diffraction data. Amongst the five compounds, that with x = 0.01 exhibited the highest photoluminescence quantum yield at room temperature, those with higher doping levels probably suffering from self-quenching of the luminescence. This compound was selected for study of the temperature-dependence of the optical properties. The emission spectra recorded over the range 300–600 K reveal distinct features: a broad band that initially increases with temperature, attributed to fluorescence from the 4T2 excited state, and a series of sharp peaks that monotonically decline with temperature, attributed to phosphorescence from the 2E. The thermometry capabilities of LaGa0.99O3:Cr0.01 were probed by the luminescence intensity ratio (LIR) method using the broad 4T2 band relative to the sharp 2E peaks. To overcome the difficulties associated with the significant overlap of the broad and sharp emissions of Cr3+, a novel method was applied in which the deconvolution of broad peaks was performed in two steps, by fitting the broad bands to the curve sections without the sharp peaks. The ratio of the deconvoluted 4T2 and 2E intensities gave an excellent fit to the Boltzmann distribution, with an energy gap between them of 2172 cm–1. The high relative sensitivity at room temperature of ca. 2.5% K–1 demonstrates very good potential of LaGa0.99O3:Cr0.01 for thermometry in the first biological window of transparency, relevant for in vivo biomedical applications.
T2  - Journal of Luminescence
T1  - Double-deconvolution method for the separation of thermalised emissions from chromium-doped lanthanum gallate and its potential in luminescence-based thermometry
VL  - 246
SP  - 118847
DO  - 10.1016/j.jlumin.2022.118847
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Mullins, Abbi L. and Ćirić, Aleksandar and Ristić, Zoran and Williams, J. A. Gareth and Radosavjević Evans, Ivana and Dramićanin, Miroslav",
year = "2022",
abstract = "A series of LaGa1–xO3:Cr3+x phosphors (x = 0.002, 0.005, 0.01, 0.02, 0.04) were synthesised by solid-state reaction and structurally characterised by Rietveld refinement from powder X-ray diffraction data. Amongst the five compounds, that with x = 0.01 exhibited the highest photoluminescence quantum yield at room temperature, those with higher doping levels probably suffering from self-quenching of the luminescence. This compound was selected for study of the temperature-dependence of the optical properties. The emission spectra recorded over the range 300–600 K reveal distinct features: a broad band that initially increases with temperature, attributed to fluorescence from the 4T2 excited state, and a series of sharp peaks that monotonically decline with temperature, attributed to phosphorescence from the 2E. The thermometry capabilities of LaGa0.99O3:Cr0.01 were probed by the luminescence intensity ratio (LIR) method using the broad 4T2 band relative to the sharp 2E peaks. To overcome the difficulties associated with the significant overlap of the broad and sharp emissions of Cr3+, a novel method was applied in which the deconvolution of broad peaks was performed in two steps, by fitting the broad bands to the curve sections without the sharp peaks. The ratio of the deconvoluted 4T2 and 2E intensities gave an excellent fit to the Boltzmann distribution, with an energy gap between them of 2172 cm–1. The high relative sensitivity at room temperature of ca. 2.5% K–1 demonstrates very good potential of LaGa0.99O3:Cr0.01 for thermometry in the first biological window of transparency, relevant for in vivo biomedical applications.",
journal = "Journal of Luminescence",
title = "Double-deconvolution method for the separation of thermalised emissions from chromium-doped lanthanum gallate and its potential in luminescence-based thermometry",
volume = "246",
pages = "118847",
doi = "10.1016/j.jlumin.2022.118847"
}
Mullins, A. L., Ćirić, A., Ristić, Z., Williams, J. A. G., Radosavjević Evans, I.,& Dramićanin, M.. (2022). Double-deconvolution method for the separation of thermalised emissions from chromium-doped lanthanum gallate and its potential in luminescence-based thermometry. in Journal of Luminescence, 246, 118847.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlumin.2022.118847
Mullins AL, Ćirić A, Ristić Z, Williams JAG, Radosavjević Evans I, Dramićanin M. Double-deconvolution method for the separation of thermalised emissions from chromium-doped lanthanum gallate and its potential in luminescence-based thermometry. in Journal of Luminescence. 2022;246:118847.
doi:10.1016/j.jlumin.2022.118847 .
Mullins, Abbi L., Ćirić, Aleksandar, Ristić, Zoran, Williams, J. A. Gareth, Radosavjević Evans, Ivana, Dramićanin, Miroslav, "Double-deconvolution method for the separation of thermalised emissions from chromium-doped lanthanum gallate and its potential in luminescence-based thermometry" in Journal of Luminescence, 246 (2022):118847,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlumin.2022.118847 . .
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