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Composite fast scintillators based on high-Z fluorescent metal–organic framework nanocrystals

Scintillators, materials that produce light pulses upon interaction with ionizing radiation, are widely employed in radiation detectors. In advanced medical-imaging technologies, fast scintillators enabling a time resolution of tens of picoseconds are required to achieve high-resolution imaging at t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Perego, J, Villa, I, Pedrini, A, Padovani, E C, Crapanzano, R, Vedda, A, Dujardin, C, Bezuidenhout, Charl X, Bracco, S, Sozzani, P E, Comotti, A, Gironi, L, Beretta, M, Salomoni, M, Kratochwil, N, Gundacker, S, Auffray, E, Meinardi, F, Monguzzi, A
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41566-021-00769-z
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2766182
Descripción
Sumario:Scintillators, materials that produce light pulses upon interaction with ionizing radiation, are widely employed in radiation detectors. In advanced medical-imaging technologies, fast scintillators enabling a time resolution of tens of picoseconds are required to achieve high-resolution imaging at the millimetre length scale. Here we demonstrate that composite materials based on fluorescent metal–organic framework (MOF) nanocrystals can work as fast scintillators. We present a prototype scintillator fabricated by embedding MOF nanocrystals in a polymer. The MOF comprises zirconium oxo-hydroxy clusters, high-Z linking nodes interacting with the ionizing radiation, arranged in an orderly fashion at a nanometric distance from 9,10-diphenylanthracene ligand emitters. Their incorporation in the framework enables fast sensitization of the ligand fluorescence, thus avoiding issues typically arising from the intimate mixing of complementary elements. This proof-of-concept prototype device shows an ultrafast scintillation rise time of ~50 ps, thus supporting the development of new scintillators based on engineered fluorescent MOF nanocrystals.