Supramolecular Liquid Crystal Carbon Dots for Solvent‐Free Direct Ink Writing

Author:

Wang Yixuan1,Liu Yun2,Hao Xingtian1,Zhou Xingping13,Peng Haiyan13,Shen Zhihao2,Smalyukh Ivan I.4,Xie Xiaolin13ORCID,Yang Bai56

Affiliation:

1. Key Lab of Material Chemistry for Energy Conversion and Storage Ministry of Education Hubei Key Lab of Materials Chemistry and Service Failure School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) Wuhan 430074 China

2. Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences Key Laboratory of Polymer Chemistry and Physics of Ministry of Education Center for Soft Matter Science and Engineering College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering Peking University Beijing 100871 China

3. National Anti‐Counterfeit Engineering Research Center Wuhan 430074 China

4. Department of Physics and Material Science and Engineering Program University of Colorado at Boulder Boulder CO 80309 USA

5. State Key Laboratory of Supramolecular Structure and Materials College of Chemistry Jilin University Changchun 130012 China

6. Optical Functional Theragnostic Joint Laboratory of Medicine and Chemistry The First Hospital of Jilin University Changchun 130012 China

Abstract

AbstractRecent years have witnessed the major advances of nanolights with extensive exploration of nano‐luminescent materials like carbon dots (CDs). However, solvent‐free processing of these materials remains a formidable challenge, impeding endeavors to develop advanced manufacturing techniques. Herein, in response to this challenge, liquid crystallization is demonstrated as a versatile and robust approach by deliberately anchoring flexible alkyl chains on the CDs surface. Alkyl chain grafting on the CDs surface is observed to substantially depress the common aggregation‐caused quenching effect, and results in a shift of self‐assembly structure from the crystalline phase to smectic liquid crystalline phase. The liquid‐crystalline phase‐transition temperature is ready to adjust by varying the alkyl chain length, endowing low‐temperature (<50 °C) melt‐processing capabilities. Consequently, the first case of direct ink writing (DIW) with liquid crystal (LC) carbon dots is demonstrated, giving rise to highly emissive objects with blue, green and red fluorescence, respectively. Another unexpected finding is that DIW with the LC inks dramatically outperforms DIW with isotropic inks, further highlighting the significance of the LC processing. The approach reported herein not only exhibits a fundamental advance by imparting LC functions to CDs, but also promises technological utility in DIW‐based advanced manufacturing.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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