Structure and photoluminescence evolution of nanodots during pyrolysis of citric acid: from molecular nanoclusters to carbogenic nanoparticles

Citric-acid-derived carbon nanodots are increasingly being explored as novel fluorescent nanomaterials due to their strong photoluminescence (PL). However, an accurate picture of the formation of carbon nanodots and an exhaustive structure–property correlation are still lacking. Herein we present a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials chemistry. C, Materials for optical and electronic devices Materials for optical and electronic devices, 2017, Vol.5 (39), p.10302-10312
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Xiaohui, Li, Hai-Bei, Shi, Lijuan, Meng, Xianrui, Wang, Yunjing, Chen, Xin, Xu, Hao, Zhang, Wenkai, Fang, Xiaomin, Ding, Tao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Citric-acid-derived carbon nanodots are increasingly being explored as novel fluorescent nanomaterials due to their strong photoluminescence (PL). However, an accurate picture of the formation of carbon nanodots and an exhaustive structure–property correlation are still lacking. Herein we present a systematic investigation of the formation mechanism of carbon nanodots by following the pyrolysis of a citric acid–diethylenetriamine precursor at different temperatures. The collective nanodots are investigated by dynamic rheological measurements, exhibiting a strong pyrolytic temperature dependence of the viscoelastic properties. Atomic force microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy reveal that the synthesized “dots” at different pyrolytic temperatures are different in essence, and the transition of their chemical structure from molecular clusters to carbogenic nanoparticles during pyrolysis is highly verified. We find that a molecular fluorophore with intense PL predominates at low temperature (
ISSN:2050-7526
2050-7534
DOI:10.1039/C7TC03429F