| Literature DB >> 32307877 |
Hai Huang1,2, Jiangkun Chen1,2, Yutong Liu1,2, Jidong Lin1,2, Shaoxiong Wang1,2, Feng Huang1,2,3, Daqin Chen1,2,3.
Abstract
The development of luminescent materials with concurrent multimodal emissions is a great challenge to improve security and data storage density. Lanthanide-doped nanocrystals are particularly appropriate for such applications for their abundant intermediate energy states and distinguishable spectroscopic profiles. However, traditional lanthanide luminescent nanoparticles have a limited capacity for information storage or complexity to shield against counterfeiting. Herein, it is demonstrated that the combination of upconverting and downshifting emissions in a particulate designed lanthanide-doped core@multishell nanoarchitecture allows the generation of multicolor dual-modal luminescence over a wide spectral range for complex information storage. Precise control of lanthanide dopants distribution in the core and distinct shells enables simultaneous excitation of 980/808 nm focusing/defocusing laser and 254 nm light and produces complex upconverting emissions from Er, Tm, Eu, and Tb via multiphoton energy transfer processes and downshifting emissions from Eu and Tb via efficient energy transfer from Ce to Eu/Tb in Gd-assisted lattices. It is experimentally proven that multiple visualized anti-counterfeit and information encryption with facile decryption and authentication using screen-printing inks containing the present core@multishell nanocrystals are practically applicable by selecting different excitation modes.Entities:
Keywords: anti-counterfeiting; core@shell; downshifting; lanthanide ions; luminescent materials; upconverting
Year: 2020 PMID: 32307877 DOI: 10.1002/smll.202000708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281