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2024 (English)In: Advanced Optical Materials, ISSN 2162-7568, E-ISSN 2195-1071, Vol. 12, no 29, article id 2400987Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Lanthanide-doped upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) have attractive emission properties but suffer from weak light-absorbing capacities and thereby relatively low brightnesses. This motivates using strongly absorbing dye molecules as antennas and sensitizers. However, despite much effort, understanding of this dye-UCNP interplay is still limited. Major sensitization mechanisms are still under discussion, largely because there is a lack of effective means to observe key factors such as dark state transitions within the dyes. Here, a combined spectroscopic procedure is established to systematically investigate the photophysics behind the dye-UCNP interaction, embracing fluorescence-based transient-state excitation-modulation, lifetime and correlation spectroscopy, and spectrofluorometry/spectrophotometry. With this procedure the heptamethine cyanine dye IR806, a typical UCNP sensitizer is studied, its photophysical model is established, its photophysics in UCL-sensitization-related environments is deciphered, and the energy transfer from the IR806 singlet excited state to Yb3+ (UCNP sensitizer ion) can be identified as the dominant sensitization mechanism. These studies suggest that IR806 can form non-emissive H-aggregates at the nanoparticle surfaces, which can be dissociated after certain light excitation duration (typically>100 µs). Moreover, buildup of a non-fluorescent, photo-redox state of IR806 after longer irradiation times (10–100 ms) can deleteriously affect its UCL sensitization effect, inferring an optimal excitation duration for dye-sensitized UCNPs, relevant for, e.g., optical imaging applications.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Wiley, 2024
Keywords
cyanine, dye sensitization, photo-redox state, photoisomerization, upconversion
National Category
Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics Physical Chemistry
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-366714 (URN)10.1002/adom.202400987 (DOI)001263080600001 ()2-s2.0-85197893156 (Scopus ID)
Note
QC 20250709
2025-07-092025-07-092025-07-09Bibliographically approved