4.7 Article

Gamma-Ray-Induced Structural Transformation of GQDs towards the Improvement of Their Optical Properties, Monitoring of Selected Toxic Compounds, and Photo-Induced Effects on Bacterial Strains

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 12, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano12152714

Keywords

graphene quantum dots; N-doping; gamma-irradiation; photoluminescence; carbofuran; 3-amino-1; 2; 4-triazole; detection; antibacterial effects

Funding

  1. Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia [7741955]
  2. Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia [451-03-68/2022-14/200017, 451-03-68/2022-14/200026]
  3. Italian Ministry of University and Research (MURST, ex-MIUR) [AIM1809078-2, CUP B78D19000280001]

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A clean and eco-friendly method using gamma irradiation was reported for nitrogen doping of graphene quantum dots (GQDs). The nitrogen-doped GQDs showed high photoluminescence quantum yield and strong blue fluorescence. The modified GQDs were used as efficient probes for the detection of insecticide and herbicide.
Structural modification of different carbon-based nanomaterials is often necessary to improve their morphology and optical properties, particularly the incorporation of N-atoms in graphene quantum dots (GQDs). Here, a clean, simple, one-step, and eco-friendly method for N-doping of GQDs using gamma irradiation is reported. GQDs were irradiated in the presence of the different ethylenediamine (EDA) amounts (1 g, 5 g, and 10 g) and the highest % of N was detected in the presence of 10 g. N-doped GQDs emitted strong, blue photoluminescence (PL). Photoluminescence quantum yield was increased from 1.45, as obtained for non-irradiated dots, to 7.24% for those irradiated in the presence of 1 g of EDA. Modified GQDs were investigated as a PL probe for the detection of insecticide Carbofuran (2,2-Dimethyl-2,3-dihydro-1-benzofuran-7-yl methylcarbamate) and herbicide Amitrole (3-amino-1,2,4-triazole). The limit of detection was 5.4 mu mol L-1 for Carbofuran. For the first time, Amitrole was detected by GQDs in a turn-off/turn-on mechanism using Pd(II) ions as a quenching agent. First, Pd(II) ions were quenched (turn-off) PL of GQDs, while after Amitrole addition, PL was recovered linearly with Amitrole concentration (turn-on). LOD was 2.03 mu mol L-1. These results suggest that modified GQDs can be used as an efficient new material for Carbofuran and Amitrole detection. Furthermore, the phototoxicity of dots was investigated on both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial strains. When bacterial cells were exposed to different GQD concentrations and illuminated with light of 470 nm wavelength, the toxic effects were not observed.

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