Luminescent upconversion nanocrystals (UCNCs) have become one of the most promising nanomaterials for biosensing, imaging, and theranostics. However, their ultimate translation into robust luminescent probes for daily use in biological and medical laboratories requires comprehension and control of the many possible deactivation pathways that cause upconversion luminescence (UCL) quenching. Here, we demonstrate that thorough modeling of UCL rise and decay kinetics using a freely accessible software can identify the UCL quenching mechanisms in small (<40 nm) UCNCs with spatial and temporal resolution. Applied to the most relevant β-NaYF4:Yb3+,Er3+ UCNCs, our model showed that only a few distinct nonradiative low-energy transitions were deactivated via specific solvent and ligand vibrations with a strong downstream effect on the population and depopulation dynamics of the emitting states. UCL quenching could penetrate ca. 4 nm inside the UCNC, which resulted in significant size-dependent changes of UCL intensities and spectra. Despite the large surface-to-volume ratios and UCL quenching via the UCNC surface, we found strong contributions of the outer layers to the overall UCL, which will be highly important for the design of UCNPs to investigate biomolecular interactions via distance-dependent energy transfer methods. Our advanced kinetic model is easily scalable to different UCNC architectures, environments, and energy transfer interactions such that relatively simple modeling of UCL kinetics can be used for efficiently optimizing UCNCs for their final application as practical luminescent probes.

Spatial and Temporal Resolution of Luminescence Quenching in Small Upconversion Nanocrystals

Pini, Federico
Investigation
;
Peruffo, Nicola
Investigation
;
Barbon, Antonio
Formal Analysis
;
Natile, Marta Maria
Conceptualization
2022

Abstract

Luminescent upconversion nanocrystals (UCNCs) have become one of the most promising nanomaterials for biosensing, imaging, and theranostics. However, their ultimate translation into robust luminescent probes for daily use in biological and medical laboratories requires comprehension and control of the many possible deactivation pathways that cause upconversion luminescence (UCL) quenching. Here, we demonstrate that thorough modeling of UCL rise and decay kinetics using a freely accessible software can identify the UCL quenching mechanisms in small (<40 nm) UCNCs with spatial and temporal resolution. Applied to the most relevant β-NaYF4:Yb3+,Er3+ UCNCs, our model showed that only a few distinct nonradiative low-energy transitions were deactivated via specific solvent and ligand vibrations with a strong downstream effect on the population and depopulation dynamics of the emitting states. UCL quenching could penetrate ca. 4 nm inside the UCNC, which resulted in significant size-dependent changes of UCL intensities and spectra. Despite the large surface-to-volume ratios and UCL quenching via the UCNC surface, we found strong contributions of the outer layers to the overall UCL, which will be highly important for the design of UCNPs to investigate biomolecular interactions via distance-dependent energy transfer methods. Our advanced kinetic model is easily scalable to different UCNC architectures, environments, and energy transfer interactions such that relatively simple modeling of UCL kinetics can be used for efficiently optimizing UCNCs for their final application as practical luminescent probes.
2022
STAMPA
Inglese
14
9
11883
11894
12
American Chemical Society
Internazionale
anonymous
Spectroscopy/Instrumentation/Analytical Sciences includes all resources concerned with spectroscopy, instrumentation and analytical sciences. The spectroscopy resources covered here are concerned with a technique involving the production, measurement and interpretation of electromagnetic spectra arising from either emission or absorption of radiant energy by various sources. The instrumentation resources deal with the application of instruments for observation, measurement or control of physical and/or chemical systems. The analytical chemistry resources deal with techniques that yield any type of information about chemical systems and include chromatography, chemometrics, thermal analysis, electroanalysis, pyrolysis, and separation science.
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The Physical Chemistry/Chemical Physics category includes resources on photochemistry, solid state chemistry, kinetics, catalysis, quantum chemistry, surface chemistry, electro-chemistry, chemical thermodynamics, thermo-physics, colloids, fullerenes and zeolites. Resources dealing with (liquid) crystals and crystallography are also included in this category. This category also includes resources on atomic, molecular and chemical physics, which concerns the structure of atoms and molecules, atomic and molecular interactions with radiation, magnetic resonance and relaxation, Mossbauer effect, and atomic and molecular collision processes and interactions.
energy migration; kinetic modeling; luminescence; nanoparticles; upconversion
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsami.1c23498
reserved
Pini, Federico; Francés-Soriano, Laura; Peruffo, Nicola; Barbon, Antonio; Hildebrandt, Niko; Natile, Marta Maria
01 CONTRIBUTO IN RIVISTA::01.01 - Articolo in rivista
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
6
262
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3419848
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