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Amorphous Carbon Dots and their Remarkable Ability to Detect 2,4,6-Trinitrophenol

IR@NML: CSIR-National Metallurgical Laboratory, Jamshedpur

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Title Amorphous Carbon Dots and their Remarkable Ability to Detect 2,4,6-Trinitrophenol
 
Creator Siddique, A B
Pramanick, A K
Chatterjee, S
Ray, M
 
Subject Materials Charcterization
 
Description Apparently mundane, amorphous nanostructures of carbon have optical properties which are as exotic as their crystalline counterparts. In this work we demonstrate a simple and inexpensive mechano-chemical method to prepare bulk quantities of self-passivated, amorphous carbon dots. Like the graphene quantum dots, the water soluble, amorphous carbon dots too, exhibit excitation-dependent photoluminescence with very high quantum yield (~40%). The origin and nature of luminescence in these high entropy nanostructures are well understood in terms of the abundant surface traps. The photoluminescence property of these carbon dots is exploited to detect trace amounts of the nitro-aromatic explosive — 2,4,6-trinitrophenol (TNP). The benign nanostructures can selectively detect TNP over a wide range of concentrations (0.5 to 200 µM) simply by visual inspection, with a detection limit of 0.2 µM, and consequently outperform nearly all reported TNP sensor materials.
 
Publisher Nature Publishing Group
 
Date 2018
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Relation https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-28021-9
http://eprints.nmlindia.org/7825/
 
Identifier Siddique, A B and Pramanick, A K and Chatterjee, S and Ray, M (2018) Amorphous Carbon Dots and their Remarkable Ability to Detect 2,4,6-Trinitrophenol. Scientific Reports, 8 (IF-4.525). p. 9770.