Brighter, smarter, and closer to application: rethinking upconversion nanoparticles
Turning promise into performance for next-generation light-based technologies.
Upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs) have long been seen as a gateway to deeper bioimaging with increased depth limits, more sensitive sensors and next-generation photonic devices, thanks to their ability to convert near-infrared light into visible emission. But there’s been a catch. In real-world settings, they’re often too dim and too difficult to integrate into working technologies.
A recent Nanoscale Horizons paper offers a compelling way forward. By re-engineering the nanoparticle surface, the researchers demonstrate a route to dramatically enhanced brightness, alongside a clear path to device integration.
Read the research
You can read the research paper "Enhanced upconversion and photoconductive nanocomposites of lanthanide-doped nanoparticles functionalized with low-vibrational-energy inorganic ligands" in Nanoscale Horizons, a leading journal for the publication of exceptionally high-quality, innovative nanoscience and nanotechnology.
A small change with big consequences
Rather than redesigning the nanoparticle itself, the study focuses on its surface chemistry, an often-overlooked source of performance loss. Replacing conventional organic ligands with low-vibrational-energy Sn2S64− ligands reduces energy dissipation at the surface, enabling far more efficient light emission.
The result is striking. Up to a 16-fold increase in upconversion luminescence intensity, alongside longer emission lifetimes.
For applications, that matters. Brighter UCNPs could translate into:
- clearer deep-tissue imaging, where stronger signals improve detection at depth
- more precise nanoscale thermometry and sensing, with higher signal-to-noise
- lower excitation powers, reducing potential damage in biological or device environments
From optical materials to functional devices
Crucially, the work doesn’t stop at improving optical performance. The Sn2S64− capped UCNPs can be annealed into a nanocomposite where UCNPs are embedded within a semiconducting interconnected SnS2 matrix, and each UCNP is electrically accessible.
This opens the door to something the field has long struggled with - integrating UCNPs into real devices.
As a proof-of-concept, the team fabricates a photodetector capable of responding to both ultraviolet and near-infrared light, showing the promise of using this new inorganic ligand-to-matrix strategy in optoelectronic devices.
Why this matters now
What makes this work particularly notable is not just the performance gain, but the strategy itself.
Focusing on surface ligand engineering, the researchers demonstrate how semiconducting inorganic complexes with low vibrational energies can be used to enhance the performance of and expand the applicability of UCNPs in future optoelectronic applications.
Upconversion nanoparticles have long sat at the boundary between promise and practicality. This work suggests that boundary may be starting to shift.
Read the full article to explore how inorganic capping agents could reshape the future of upconversion nanomaterials.
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