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Influence of Electron Acceptor and Electron Donor on the Photophysical Properties of Carbon Dots: A Comparative Investigation at the Bulk‐State and Single‐Particle Level
Author(s) -
Srivastava Indrajit,
Khamo John S.,
Pandit Subhendu,
Fathi Parinaz,
Huang Xuedong,
Cao Anleen,
Haasch Richard T.,
Nie Shuming,
Zhang Kai,
Pan Dipanjan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201902466
Subject(s) - materials science , chemical physics , electron , intramolecular force , electron transfer , acceptor , electron acceptor , ion , particle (ecology) , carbon fibers , molecule , nanotechnology , electron donor , photochemistry , chemistry , physics , condensed matter physics , catalysis , biochemistry , oceanography , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , geology , composite number , stereochemistry , composite material
Carbon dots (CDs) are extensively studied to investigate their unique optical properties such as undergoing electron transfer in different scenarios. This work presents an in‐depth investigation to study the ensemble‐averaged state/bulk state and single‐particle level photophysical properties of CDs that are passivated with electron‐accepting (CD‐A) and electron‐donating molecules (CD‐D) on their surface. The bulk‐state experiments reveal that in a mixture of these CDs, CD‐A dominates the overall photophyiscal properties and eventually leads to formation of at least two associated geometries, which is dependent on time, concentration, intramolecular electron/charge transfer, and hydrogen bonding. Single‐particle studies, however, do not reveal an “acceptor‐dominating” scenario based on analysis of instantaneous intensity, bleaching kinetics, and photoblinking, indicating that the direct interaction of these CDs may affect their photophysical properties in the bulk state due to formation of hierarchical structural assemblies. Here it is anticipated that these fundamental results will further provide insights toward the understanding of the complex mechanism associated with CD emission, which is one of the key contributors to their successful application. As an immediate application of these functional CDs, it is shown that they can be used as a sensing array for metal ions and serve as a powerful toolbox for their technological applications.

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