Methods for Broadband Spectral Analysis: Intrinsic Fluorescence Temperature Sensing as an Example

Appl Spectrosc. 2017 Jun;71(6):1256-1262. doi: 10.1177/0003702816678868. Epub 2016 Nov 24.

Abstract

A systematic study was performed on the temperature-dependent fluorescence of (Ba,Sr)2SiO4:Eu2+. The barycenter and extended intensity ratio techniques were proposed to characterize the broadband fluorescence spectra. These techniques and other known methods (listed below) were employed and compared in the fluorescent temperature sensing experiment. Multiple sensing functions were obtained using the behaviors of: (1) the barycenter location of the emission band; (2) the emission bandwidth; and (3) the ratio of intensities at different wavelengths in the emission band, respectively. The barycenter technique was not limited by the spectrometer resolution and worked well while the peak location method failed. All the sensing functions were based on the intrinsic characteristics of the fluorescence of the phosphor and demonstrated nearly linear relationships with temperature in the measuring range. The multifunctional temperature-sensing abilities of the phosphor can be applied in a point thermometer or thermal mapping. The new techniques were validated successfully for characterizing various spectra.

Keywords: Temperature; band shift; barium–strontium silicate; fluorescence intensity ratio.