Microstructure-Dependent Optical Properties of Doped Spinel Oxide Nanosystems
POSTER
Abstract
Doped spinel crystals show long-lasting emissions (LLP) in the visible and near-IR regions that can be activated by X-ray or UV-visible light. Such properties make this material a promising candidate for background-free deep-tissue bioimaging, photodynamic or photon-induced therapy (PIT), optical sensing, and many other applications. The optical properties, however, are highly dependent on the dopant environment and the nature of the trap states responsible for the LLP. Annealing changes the defect structures of Cr and the trap states and the strength of the energy transfer between the different Cr defects and significantly affects the optical properties. We found crystal field decrease at low temperatures caused by quasi-melted pseudocrystalline surface, making them temperature sensitive, an order of magnitude increase in the photon yield upon X-ray or UV illumination, and temperature-dependent LLP. The outcome of the fundamental research on the defect structure is that at optimum annealing conditions, activating the IR700 photoactive dye used in PIT, with X-ray excitation, or by the LLP that promises PIT for deep-seated or embedded tumors or other diseases is possible.
Publication: Mátyás M. Rudolf, Gábor Bortel, Bence G. Márkus, Nikoletta Jegenyes, Vladimir Verkhovlyuk, Katalin Kamarás, Ferenc Simon, Adam Gali*, and David Beke, Optimization of Chromium-Doped Zinc Gallate Nanocrystals for Strong Near-Infrared Emission by Annealing,<br>ACS Appl. Nano Mater. 2022, 5, 7, 8950–8961 https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.2c01156<br><br>David Beke et al: Chem. Mater. 2021, 33, 7, 2457–2465 https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c04671
Presenters
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David Beke
Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter, Department o
Authors
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David Beke
Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter, Department o