Insight into Eu3+-Doped Phase-Change K3Lu(PO4)2 Phosphate toward Data Encryption

Inorg Chem. 2023 Jun 19;62(24):9679-9686. doi: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c01205. Epub 2023 Jun 9.

Abstract

Adjusting the local coordination environment of lanthanide luminescent ions can modulate their crystal-field splittings and broaden their applications in the relevant optical fields. Here, we introduced Eu3+ ions into the phase-change K3Lu(PO4)2 phosphate and found that the temperature-induced reversible phase transitions of K3Lu(PO4)2 (phase I ⇆ phase II and phase II ⇆ phase III, below room temperature) give rise to an obvious photoluminescence (PL) difference of Eu3+ ions. The Eu3+ emission mainly focused on the 5D07F1 transition in phase III but manifested comparable 5D07F1,2 transitions in the two low-temperature phases. On this basis, the change of Eu3+-doped concentration led to the phase evolution in Eu3+:K3Lu(PO4)2, which could stabilize two types of low-temperature polymorphs to the specific temperature by controlling the doping content. Finally, we proposed a feasible information encryption strategy based on the PL modulation of Eu3+:K3Lu(PO4)2 phosphors, which was caused by the temperature hysteresis of the relevant phase transition, exhibiting good stability and reproducibility. Our findings pave an avenue for exploring the optical application of lanthanide-based luminescent materials by introducing phase-change hosts.