1. Hydrophobic carbon dots with blue dispersed emission and red aggregation-induced emission
- Author
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Haiyao Yang, Bingfu Lei, Jianle Zhuang, Xuejie Zhang, Zhouyi Guo, Yingliang Liu, Zhiming Liu, and Chaofan Hu
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Materials science ,Science ,Stacking ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,Photochemistry ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Nanomaterials ,Hydrophobic effect ,03 medical and health sciences ,lcsh:Science ,Multidisciplinary ,Filter paper ,Quantum dots ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Fluorescence ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Intramolecular force ,Optical materials ,lcsh:Q ,0210 nano-technology ,Luminescence ,Carbon - Abstract
Carbon dots (CDs) have been studied for years as one of the most promising fluorescent nanomaterials. However, CDs with red or solid-state fluorescence are rarely reported. Herein, through a one-pot solvothermal treatment, hydrophobic CDs (H-CDs) with blue dispersed emission and red aggregation-induced emission are obtained. When water is introduced, the hydrophobic interaction leads to aggregation of the H-CDs. The formation of H-CD clusters induces the turning off of the blue emission, as the carbonized cores suffer from π-π stacking interactions, and the turning on of the red fluorescence, due to restriction of the surfaces’ intramolecular rotation around disulfide bonds, which conforms to the aggregation-induced-emission phenomenon. This on-off fluorescence of the H-CDs is reversible when the H-CD powder is completely dissolved. Moreover, the H-CD solution dispersed in filter paper is nearly colorless. Finally, we develop a reversible two switch-mode luminescence ink for advanced anti-counterfeiting and dual-encryption., Carbon dots that display long-wavelength and multicolor emission are desirable for biological and anti-counterfeiting applications. Here, the authors design hydrophobic carbon dots with reversible two-mode fluorescence, which exhibit blue emission when dissolved in solution, and red solid-state fluorescence when aggregated.
- Published
- 2019