Issue 63, 2020, Issue in Progress

Acetone-derived luminescent polymer dots: a facile and low-cost synthesis leads to remarkable photophysical properties

Abstract

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.

Graphical abstract: Acetone-derived luminescent polymer dots: a facile and low-cost synthesis leads to remarkable photophysical properties

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Jul 2020
Accepted
10 Oct 2020
First published
19 Oct 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2020,10, 38437-38445

Acetone-derived luminescent polymer dots: a facile and low-cost synthesis leads to remarkable photophysical properties

S. G. Mucha, L. Firlej, J. Bantignies, A. Żak, M. Samoć and K. Matczyszyn, RSC Adv., 2020, 10, 38437 DOI: 10.1039/D0RA05957A

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