What Are Carbon Quantum Dots?


Posted February 21, 2022 by Bonnibelle

Carbon dots, also known as carbon quantum dots (CQDs, CDs, or C-dots) or graphene quantum dots, possess chemical structure and physical properties similar to those of graphene oxide.

 
Carbon dots, also known as carbon quantum dots (CQDs, CDs, or C-dots) or graphene quantum dots, possess chemical structure and physical properties similar to those of graphene oxide. Carbon quantum dots were accidentally discovered during purification of single-wall nanotubes in 2004 and have been defined as discrete, quasispherical, water-soluble, highly fluorescent nanomaterial that falls in the size range of 2–8 nm. They consist of clusters of carbon with various other atoms such as nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, and phosphorus.
1.What is the difference between carbon quantum dots and graphene quantum dots?
Carbon quantum dots are quasi-spherical carbon nanoparticles with very small sizes (1–10 nm), whereas graphene quantum dots (GQDs or G-dots) are small fragments of graphene with extraordinary luminescence properties.
2.What are carbon quantum dots used for?
Carbon quantum dots are a new class of carbon nanoparticles, and have attracted much attention as a prospective competitor to conventional semiconductor quantum dots owing to its excellent optical absorptivity, chemical stability, and facile synthesis. CQDs are the potential replacement for the toxic metal-based quantum dots. CQDs are being used in various fields of applications such as bioimaging, medical diagnosis, biosensing, chemical sensing, photocatalysis, and photovoltaic devices. CQDs are characteristically quasispherical carbon nanoparticles composed of amorphous to crystalline carbon base.
3.How to synthesize carbon quantum dots?
In general, CQDs are being synthesized in two routes, namely, the top-down and the bottom-up routes such as arc-discharge methods, ablation of a carbon target, chemical oxidation of soots, electrochemical oxidation of graphite rod, thermal route, microwave route, and supported synthesis.
4.Are carbon dots toxic?
Carbon dots can be nontoxic even without any additional surface modification by capping agents. Tao et al. (2012) have found that the as-made, bare carbon dots from different carbon precursors do not exhibit any appreciable cytotoxicity to the human kidney embryonic 293T cells until the incubation concentration reaches as high as 0.5 mg mL−1. This result of low toxicity to cells has been confirmed by another independent study on the same 293T cell line but using carbon dots synthesized from a different electrooxidation approach.
About the author
CD Bioparticles provides fluorescent carbon quantum dots (C-dots) with high quality and quantum yield and wide applications such as imaging, biosensor, drug delivery, optronics, and catalysis. AS a leading supplier of nanoparticles, CD Bioparticles offers high quality carbon nanomaterials including carbon nanotubes, nanofibers, carbon quantum dots, and graphene. Our carbon nanotube products include single-walled, double-walled and multi-walled structures with different sizes and surface modifications.
Reference
1.Scaria, J., Karim, A. V., Divyapriya, G., Nidheesh, P. V., & Kumar, M. S. (2020). Carbon-supported semiconductor nanoparticles as effective photocatalysts for water and wastewater treatment. In Nano-Materials as Photocatalysts for Degradation of Environmental Pollutants (pp. 245-278). Elsevier.
2.d’Amora, M., & Giordani, S. (2018). Carbon nanomaterials for nanomedicine. In Smart Nanoparticles for Biomedicine (pp. 103-113). Elsevier.
3.Ghosh, D., Sarkar, K., Devi, P., Kim, K. H., & Kumar, P. (2021). Current and future perspectives of carbon and graphene quantum dots: From synthesis to strategy for building optoelectronic and energy devices. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 135, 110391.
4.Ray, S. C., & Jana, N. R. (2017). Toxicology and biosafety of carbon nanomaterials. Carbon Nanomaterials for Biological and Medical Applications, 1st ed.; Ray, SC, Jana, NR, Eds, 205-229.
5.Sk, M. P., & Dutta, A. (2020). New-generation quantum dots as contrast agent in imaging. In Nanomaterials in Diagnostic Tools and Devices (pp. 525-556). Elsevier.
6.Tao, H., Yang, K., Ma, Z., Wan, J., Zhang, Y., Kang, Z., & Liu, Z. (2012). In vivo NIR fluorescence imaging, biodistribution, and toxicology of photoluminescent carbon dots produced from carbon nanotubes and graphite. Small, 8(2), 281-290.
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Last Updated February 21, 2022