Acetone-derived luminescent polymer dots: a facile and low-cost synthesis leads to remarkable photophysical properties
Carbon-based dots have been attracting much attention as potentially superior alternatives to more conventional semiconductor nanoparticles, due to their fascinating optical properties, chemical and photochemical stability, unique environmental-friendliness, and the versatility of fabrication routes...
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Veröffentlicht in: | RSC advances 2020-10, Vol.1 (63), p.38437-38445 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Carbon-based dots have been attracting much attention as potentially superior alternatives to more conventional semiconductor nanoparticles, due to their fascinating optical properties, chemical and photochemical stability, unique environmental-friendliness, and the versatility of fabrication routes. Many commercial materials and organic compounds have been considered so far as carbon precursors but in many cases the fabrication required high-temperature conditions or led to inhomogeneous final products. Here we report on a simple low-cost synthesis of non-conjugated carbon-rich polymer dots (PDs) that uses acetone as carbon precursor. Both hydrophilic and hydrophobic fractions of PDs were obtained, with the respective average diameters of 2-4 nm and
ca.
6 nm. The as-obtained PDs reveal greenish-blue photoluminescence (PL) and high quantum yields (∼5-7%) and complex kinetics of the decays with the average lifetime of ∼3.5 ns. Such luminescent acetone-derived PDs may find application in several fields, including sensing and bioimaging.
Acetone-derived polymer dots (PDs) have been fabricated, according to a base-mediated synthesis route at room temperature. As-obtained hydrophobic and hydrophilic PDs revealed a strong greenish-blue emission due to the crosslink-enhanced effect. |
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ISSN: | 2046-2069 2046-2069 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d0ra05957a |