Ultrasensitive Optical Thermometry via Inhibiting the Energy Transfer in Zero-Dimensional Lead-Free Metal Halide Single Crystals.
Yanqing WuJuntao LiDaoyuan ZhengXusheng XiaSong-Qiu YangYang YangTianxin BaiXiaochen WangJunsheng ChenBin YangPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2022)
Self-referencing optical thermometry based on the fluorescence intensity ratio (FIR) have drawn extensive attention as a result of their high sensitivity and non-invasively fast response to temperature. However, it is a great challenge for luminescent materials to achieve simultaneously high absolute and relative temperature sensitivity based on the FIR technique. Herein, we developed a novel optical thermometer by designing hybrid lead-free metal halide (TTPhP) 2 MnCl 4 :Sb 3+ (TTPhP + = tetraphenylphosphonium cation) single crystals with multimodal photoluminescence (PL). The large TTPhP + organic chain resulted in isolated [MnCl 4 ] 2- and [SbCl 5 ] 2- in the single crystal, which leads to a negligible energy trasfer process within them. Therefore, the two PL bands (band 1 from [MnCl 4 ] 2- ) with a peak at 518 nm and band 2 (from [SbCl 5 ] 2 ) with a peak at 640 nm exhibit different thermal-quenching effects, which resulted in excellent temperature sensitivity, with the maximum absolute and relative sensitivities reaching 0.236 K -1 and 3.77% K -1 in a temperature range from 300 to 400 K. Both the absolute and relative sensitivities are among the highest values for luminescence thermometry.