Abstract
Carbon dots (CDots) are small carbon nanoparticles with effective surface passivation by organic functionalization. In the reported work, the surface functionalization of preexisting small carbon nanoparticles with N-ethylcarbazole (NEC) was achieved by the NEC radical addition. Due to the major difference in microwave absorption between the carbon nanoparticles and organic species such as NEC, the nanoparticles could be selectively heated via microwave irradiation to enable the hydrogen abstraction in NEC to generate NEC radicals, followed by in situ additions of the radicals to the nanoparticles. The resulting NEC-CDots were characterized by microscopy and spectroscopy techniques including quantitative proton and 13C NMR methods. The optical spectroscopic properties of the dot sample were found to be largely the same as those of CDots from other organic functionalization schemes. The high structural stability of NEC-CDots benefiting from the radical addition functionalization is highlighted and discussed.
Funder
National Science Foundation
USDA
Air Force Research Laboratory
Reference48 articles.
1. Quantum-Sized Carbon Particles for Bright and Colorful Photoluminescence;Sun;J. Am. Chem. Soc.,2006
2. Sun, Y.-P. (2010). Fluorescent Carbon Nanoparticles. (7,829,772 B2), U.S. Patent.
3. Sun, Y.-P. (2020). Carbon Dots—Exploring Carbon at Zero-Dimension, Springer International Publishing.
4. Truly Fluorescent Excitation-Dependent Carbon Dots and Their Applications in Multicolor Cellular Imaging and Multidimensional Sensing;Pan;Adv. Mater.,2015
5. Toward High-Efficient Red Emissive Carbon Dots: Facile Preparation, Unique Properties, and Applications as Multifunctional Theranostic Agents;Sun;Chem. Mater.,2016
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献