6533b82bfe1ef96bd128d687

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The interaction of photoexcited carbon nanodots with metal ions disclosed down to the femtosecond scale

Andrea CannizzoThomas FeurerLuisa SciortinoMarco CannasFranco Mario GelardiAntonino MadoniaMichela GazzettoAlice SciortinoAlice SciortinoAlice SciortinoEgmont RohwerFabrizio Messina

subject

Materials scienceQuenching (fluorescence)530 Physicschemistry.chemical_elementNanotechnology02 engineering and technology620 Engineering010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyElementary charge01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesIonElectron transferchemistryChemical physicsFemtosecondPhotocatalysisGeneral Materials ScienceMaterials Science (all)0210 nano-technologyGround stateCarbon

description

Fluorescent carbon nanodots are a novel family of carbon-based nanoscale materials endowed with an outstanding combination of properties that make them very appealing for applications in nanosensing, photonics, solar energy harvesting and photocatalysis. One of the remarkable properties of carbon dots is their strong sensitivity to the local environment, especially to metal ions in solution. These interactions provide a testing ground for their marked photochemical properties, highlighted by many studies, and frequently driven by charge transfer events. Here we combine several optical techniques, down to femtosecond time resolution, to understand the interplay between carbon nanodots and aqueous metal ions such as Cu²⁺ and Zn²⁺. We find that copper inhibits the fluorescence of carbon dots through static and diffusional quenching mechanisms, and our measurements allow discriminating between the two. Ultrafast optical methods are then used to address the dynamics of copper-dot complexes, wherein static quenching takes place, and unveil the underlying complexity of their photocycle. We propose an initial increase of electronic charge on the surface of the dot, upon photo-excitation, followed by a partial electron transfer to the nearby ion, with 0.2 ps and 1.9 ps time constants, and finally a very fast (≪1 ps) non-radiative electron–hole recombination which brings the system back to the ground state. Notably, we find that the electron transfer stage is governed by an ultrafast water rearrangement around photo-excited dots, pointing out the key role of solvent interactions in the photo-physics of these systems.

https://doi.org/10.1039/c7nr03754f