English

Broadband NIR photon upconversion generates NIR persistent luminescence for bioimaging

Optics 2024-03-15 v1 Chemical Physics

Abstract

Upconversion persistent luminescence (UCPL) phosphors that can be directly charged by near-infrared (NIR) light have gained considerable attention due to their promising applications ranging from photonics to biomedicine. However, current lanthanide-based UCPL phosphors show small absorption cross-sections and low upconversion charging efficiency. The development of UCPL phosphors faces challenges of lacking flexible upconversion charging pathways and poor design flexibility. Herein, we discovered a new lattice defect-mediated broadband photon upconversion process and the accompanied NIR-to-NIR UCPL in Cr-doped zinc gallate nanoparticles. The zinc gallate nanoparticles can be directly activated by broadband NIR light in the 700-1000 nm range to produce persistent luminescence at about 700 nm, which is also readily enhanced by rationally tailoring the lattice defects in the phosphors. This proposed UCPL phosphors achieved a signal-to-background ratio of over 200 in bioimaging by efficiently avoiding interference from autofluorescence and light scattering. Our findings reported the lattice defect-mediated photon upconversion for the first time, which significantly expanded the horizons for the flexible design of NIR-to-NIR UCPL phosphors toward broad applications.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2403.09253,
  title  = {Broadband NIR photon upconversion generates NIR persistent luminescence for bioimaging},
  author = {Shuting Yang and Bing Qi and Mingzi Sun and Wenjing Dai and Ziyun Miao and Wei Zheng and Bolong Huang and Jie Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2403.09253},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T15:19:51.943Z