KJ

Kellie Jenkinson

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2 records found

Journal article (2023) - Jence T. Mulder, Michael S. Meijer, J. Jasper Van Blaaderen, Indy Du Fosse, Kellie Jenkinson, Sara Bals, Liberato Manna, Arjan J. Houtepen
Ytterbium-doped LiYF 4 (Yb:YLF) is a commonly used material for laser applications, as a photon upconversion medium, and for optical refrigeration. As nanocrystals (NCs), the material is also of interest for biological and physical applications. Unfortunately, as with most phosphors, with the reduction in size comes a large reduction of the photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY), which is typically associated with an increase in surface-related PL quenching. Here, we report the synthesis of bipyramidal Yb:YLF NCs with a short axis of ∼60 nm. We systematically study and remove all sources of PL quenching in these NCs. By chemically removing all traces of water from the reaction mixture, we obtain NCs that exhibit a near-unity PLQY for an Yb 3+ concentration below 20%. At higher Yb 3+ concentrations, efficient concentration quenching occurs. The surface PL quenching is mitigated by growing an undoped YLF shell around the NC core, resulting in near-unity PLQY values even for fully Yb 3+-based LiYbF 4 cores. This unambiguously shows that the only remaining quenching sites in core-only Yb:YLF NCs reside on the surface and that concentration quenching is due to energy transfer to the surface. Monte Carlo simulations can reproduce the concentration dependence of the PLQY. Surprisingly, Förster resonance energy transfer does not give satisfactory agreement with the experimental data, whereas nearest-neighbor energy transfer does. This work demonstrates that Yb 3+-based nanophosphors can be synthesized with a quality close to that of bulk single crystals. The high Yb 3+ concentration in the LiYbF 4/LiYF 4 core/shell nanocrystals increases the weak Yb 3+ absorption, making these materials highly promising for fundamental studies and increasing their effectiveness in bioapplications and optical refrigeration. ...
Journal article (2023) - J.T. Mulder, Kellie Jenkinson, Stefano Toso, Mirko Prato, W.H. Evers, Sara Bals, Liberato Manna, A.J. Houtepen
Lanthanide-doped LiYF4 (Ln:YLF) is commonly used for a broad variety of optical applications, such as lasing, photon upconversion and optical refrigeration. When synthesized as nanocrystals (NCs), this material is also of interest for biological applications and fundamental physical studies. Until now, it was unclear how Ln:YLF NCs grow from their ionic precursors into tetragonal NCs with a well-defined, bipyramidal shape and uniform dopant distribution. Here, we study the nucleation and growth of ytterbium-doped LiYF4 (Yb:YLF), as a template for general Ln:YLF NC syntheses. We show that the formation of bipyramidal Yb:YLF NCs is a multistep process starting with the formation of amorphous Yb:YLF spheres. Over time, these spheres grow via Ostwald ripening and crystallize, resulting in bipyramidal Yb:YLF NCs. We further show that prolonged heating of the NCs results in the degradation of the NCs, observed by the presence of large LiF cubes and small, irregular Yb:YLF NCs. Due to the similarity in chemical nature of all lanthanide ions our work sheds light on the formation stages of Ln:YLF NCs in general. ...