Cathodoluminescence-based nanoscopic thermometry in a lanthanide-doped phosphor
ORAL
Abstract
Crucial to analyze phenomena as varied as plasmonic hot spots and the spread of cancer in living tissue, nanoscale thermometry is challenging: probes are usually larger than the sample under study, and contact techniques may alter the sample temperature itself. Many photostable nanomaterials whose luminescence is temperature-dependent, such as lanthanide-doped phosphors, have been shown to be good non-contact thermometric sensors when optically excited. Using such nanomaterials, in this work we accomplished the key milestone of enabling far-field thermometry with a spatial resolution that is not diffraction-limited at readout. We explore thermal effects on the cathodoluminescence of lanthanide-doped NaYF4 nanoparticles. Whereas cathodoluminescence from such lanthanide-doped nanomaterials has been previously observed, here we use quantitative features of such emission for the first time towards an application beyond localization. We demonstrate a thermometry scheme that is based on cathodoluminescence lifetime changes as a function of temperature that achieves ∼ 30 mK sensitivity in sub-μm nanoparticle patches. The scheme is robust against spurious effects related to electron beam radiation damage and optical alignment fluctuations.
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Presenters
Clarice D Aiello
Bioengineering Dept., Stanford University
Authors
Clarice D Aiello
Bioengineering Dept., Stanford University
Andrea D Pickel
Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, Mechanical Engineering Dept., UC Berkeley
Edward Barnard
Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Rebecca Wai
Chemistry Dept., UC Berkeley
Christian Monachon
Attolight AG
Edward Wong
Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Shaul Aloni
Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Frank Ogletree
Molecular Foundry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Chris Dames
University of California, Berkeley, Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, Mechanical Engineering Dept., UC Berkeley
Naomi Ginsberg
University of California, Berkeley, Chemistry Dept., UC Berkeley