| Literature DB >> 26845751 |
Cláudia Emanuele Machado1, Letícia Gazola Tartuci1, Honória de Fátima Gorgulho1, Luiz Fernando Cappa de Oliveira2, Jefferson Bettini3, Daniela Pereira dos Santos1, Jefferson Luis Ferrari1, Marco Antônio Schiavon4.
Abstract
This work used L-tartaric acid as a model molecule to evaluate how the use of inert and oxidizing atmospheres during pyrolysis affected the physical and optical properties of the resulting carbon dots (CDs). Pyrolysis revealed to be a simple procedure that afforded CDs in a single step, dismissed the addition of organic solvents, and involved only one extraction stage that employed water. By X-ray diffraction a dependency between the structure of the CDs and the atmosphere (oxidizing or inert) used during the pyrolysis was found. Potentiometric titration demonstrated that the CDs were largely soluble in water; it also aided characterization of the various groups that contained sp(3) -hybridized carbon atoms on the surface of the dots. Raman spectroscopy suggested that different amounts of sp(2)- and sp(3)-hybridized carbon atoms emerged on the CDs depending on the pyrolysis atmosphere. In conclusion, the pyrolysis atmosphere influenced the physical properties, such as the composition and the final structure.Entities:
Keywords: atmospheres; carbon dots; luminescence; nanoparticles; optical properties; physical properties
Year: 2016 PMID: 26845751 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201504234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236