Effect of the Photoexcitation Wavelength and Polarization on the Generated Heat by a Nd-Doped Microspinner at the Microscale
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ortiz Rivero, Elisa; González Gómez, Carlos D.; Rica Alarcón, Raúl Alberto; Haro González, PatriciaEditorial
John Wiley & Sons
Materia
Heat transfer Nanothermometers Neodymium
Fecha
2024-04-04Referencia bibliográfica
E. Ortiz-Rivero, C. D. González-Gómez, R. A. Rica, P. Haro-González, Effect of the Photoexcitation Wavelength and Polarization on the Generated Heat by a Nd-Doped Microspinner at the Microscale. Small 2024, 2308534. https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202308534
Patrocinador
Projects CNS2022-135495, PID2023-151078OB-I00 and TED2021-129937B-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by the “European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR”; Spanish Ministerio de Universidades, through the FPU program (FPU19/04803); Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación de la Junta de Andalucía and by FEDER “Una manera de hacer Europa” (P18-FR-3583)Resumen
Thermal control at small scales is critical for studying temperature-dependent
biological systems and microfluidic processes. Concerning this, optical
trapping provides a contactless method to remotely study microsized heating
sources. This work introduces a birefringent luminescent microparticle of
NaLuF4:Nd3+ as a local heater in a liquid system. When optically trapped with
a circularly polarized laser beam, the microparticle rotates and heating is
induced through multiphonon relaxation of the Nd3+ ions. The temperature
increment in the surrounding medium is investigated, reaching a maximum
heating of ≈5 °C within a 30 μm radius around the static particle under
51 mW laser excitation at 790 nm. Surprisingly, this study reveals that the
particle’s rotation minimally affects the temperature distribution, contrary to
the intuitive expectation of liquid stirring. The influence of the microparticle
rotation on the reduction of heating transfer is analyzed. Numerical
simulations confirm that the thermal distribution remains consistent
regardless of spinning. Instead, the orientation-dependence of the
luminescence process emerges as a key factor responsible for the reduction in
heating. The anisotropy in particle absorption and the lag between the
orientation of the particle and the laser polarization angle contribute to this
effect. Therefore, caution must be exercised when employing spinning
polarization-dependent luminescent particles for microscale thermal analysis
using rotation dynamics.