4.7 Article

A rich gallery of carbon dots based photoluminescent suspensions and powders derived by citric acid/urea

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-89984-w

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Funding

  1. UCLan Research Centre for Smart Materials

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This study demonstrates the generation of a diverse range of fluorescent materials by using citric acid and urea as precursors, with the ability to fine-tune the chemical composition and optical properties by adjusting the molar ratio of the reactants. The approach leads to the formation of photoluminescent materials in liquid and solid state with different emissive signals arising from various sources within the materials.
In this study we demonstrate simple guidelines to generate a diverse range of fluorescent materials in both liquid and solid state by focusing on the most popular C-dots precursors, i.e. the binary systems of citric acid and urea. The pyrolytic treatment of those precursors combined with standard size separation techniques (dialysis and filtration), leads to four distinct families of photoluminescent materials in which the emissive signal predominantly arises from C-dots with embedded fluorophores, cyanuric acid-rich C-dots, a blend of molecular fluorophores and a mixture of C-dots with unbound molecular fluorophores, respectively. Within each one of those families the chemical composition and the optical properties of their members can be fine-tuned by adjusting the molar ratio of the reactants. Apart from generating a variety of aqueous dispersions, our approach leads to highly fluorescent powders derived from precursors comprising excessive amounts of urea that is consumed for the build-up of the carbogenic cores, the molecular fluorophores and the solid diluent matrix that suppresses self-quenching effects.

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