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Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer

Heat measurement induced by photoexcitation of a plasmonic metal nanoparticle assembly under environmental conditions is of primary importance for the further development of applications in the fields of (photo)catalysis, nanoelectronics and nanomedicine. Nevertheless, the fine control of the rise i...

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Autores principales: Glais, Estelle, Maître, Agnès, Viana, Bruno, Chanéac, Corinne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9418760/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36134193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00010a
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author Glais, Estelle
Maître, Agnès
Viana, Bruno
Chanéac, Corinne
author_facet Glais, Estelle
Maître, Agnès
Viana, Bruno
Chanéac, Corinne
author_sort Glais, Estelle
collection PubMed
description Heat measurement induced by photoexcitation of a plasmonic metal nanoparticle assembly under environmental conditions is of primary importance for the further development of applications in the fields of (photo)catalysis, nanoelectronics and nanomedicine. Nevertheless, the fine control of the rise in temperature remains difficult and limits the use of this technology due to the lack of local temperature measurement tools working under environmental conditions. Luminescence nanothermometers are an alternative solution to the limitations of conventional contact thermometers since they are able to give an absolute temperature value with high spatial resolution using common optical equipment. As a proof of concept of this nanothermometry approach, a high local temperature exceeding one hundred degrees is measured on the thermalized photoexcited aggregate of gold nanorods using ZnGa(2)O(4):Cr(3+),Bi(3+) nanothermometers that have a strong temperature dependence on the luminescence lifetime of chromium(iii) and high sensitivity over an extensive range of temperatures. A study on the influence of the average distance between nanosensors and nanoheaters on the measured temperature is carried out by coating the nanosensors with a silica layer of tunable thickness, highlighting the temperature gradient at the vicinity of the nanoheater as the theory predicts. The variation of the optical nanosensor response is relevant and promising, and it could be further envisioned as a potential candidate for local temperature measurement at the nanoscale since no plasmonic effect on Cr(3+) lifetime is observed. The results reported here open up an even wider field of application for high temperature nanothermometry on real samples such as aggregate particles for many applications including catalysis and nanoelectronics. Thermometry using luminescent nanoprobes, which is complementary to thermal microscopy techniques, will allow in situ and in operando temperature monitoring at very small scales.
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spelling pubmed-94187602022-09-20 Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer Glais, Estelle Maître, Agnès Viana, Bruno Chanéac, Corinne Nanoscale Adv Chemistry Heat measurement induced by photoexcitation of a plasmonic metal nanoparticle assembly under environmental conditions is of primary importance for the further development of applications in the fields of (photo)catalysis, nanoelectronics and nanomedicine. Nevertheless, the fine control of the rise in temperature remains difficult and limits the use of this technology due to the lack of local temperature measurement tools working under environmental conditions. Luminescence nanothermometers are an alternative solution to the limitations of conventional contact thermometers since they are able to give an absolute temperature value with high spatial resolution using common optical equipment. As a proof of concept of this nanothermometry approach, a high local temperature exceeding one hundred degrees is measured on the thermalized photoexcited aggregate of gold nanorods using ZnGa(2)O(4):Cr(3+),Bi(3+) nanothermometers that have a strong temperature dependence on the luminescence lifetime of chromium(iii) and high sensitivity over an extensive range of temperatures. A study on the influence of the average distance between nanosensors and nanoheaters on the measured temperature is carried out by coating the nanosensors with a silica layer of tunable thickness, highlighting the temperature gradient at the vicinity of the nanoheater as the theory predicts. The variation of the optical nanosensor response is relevant and promising, and it could be further envisioned as a potential candidate for local temperature measurement at the nanoscale since no plasmonic effect on Cr(3+) lifetime is observed. The results reported here open up an even wider field of application for high temperature nanothermometry on real samples such as aggregate particles for many applications including catalysis and nanoelectronics. Thermometry using luminescent nanoprobes, which is complementary to thermal microscopy techniques, will allow in situ and in operando temperature monitoring at very small scales. RSC 2021-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9418760/ /pubmed/36134193 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00010a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Glais, Estelle
Maître, Agnès
Viana, Bruno
Chanéac, Corinne
Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer
title Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer
title_full Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer
title_fullStr Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer
title_full_unstemmed Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer
title_short Experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped ZnGa(2)O(4) as a nanothermometer
title_sort experimental measurement of local high temperature at the surface of gold nanorods using doped znga(2)o(4) as a nanothermometer
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9418760/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36134193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00010a
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