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Improper Background Treatment Underestimates Thermometric Performance of Rare Earth Vanadate and Phosphovanadate Nanocrystals.

Rafael Vieira PerrellaGustavo DerrosoPaulo Cesar de Sousa Filho
Published in: ACS omega (2024)
Luminescence thermometry is the state-of-the-art technique for remote nanoscale temperature sensing, offering numerous promising cutting-edge applications. Advancing nanothermometry further requires rational design of phosphors and well-defined, comprehensive mathematical treatment of spectral information. However, important questions regarding improper signal processing in ratiometric luminescence thermometry are continuously overlooked in the literature. Here, we demonstrate that systematic errors arising from background/signal superposition impact the calculated thermometric quality parameters of ratiometric thermometers. We designed ultraviolet-excitable (Y,Eu)VO 4 and (Y,Eu)(P,V)O 4 nanocrystals showing overlapped VO 4 3- and Eu 3+ emissions to discuss systematically how uncorrected background emissions cause magnified (∼10×) temperature uncertainties and undervalued (∼60%) relative thermal sensitivities. Adequate separation of spectral contributions from the VO 4 3- background and the Eu 3+ signals via baseline correction is necessary to prevent underestimation of the thermometric performances. The described approach can be potentially extended to other luminescent thermometers to account for signal superposition, thus enabling to circumvent computation of apparent, miscalculated thermometric parameters.
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