Rare-Earth-Metal-Free Solid-State Fluorescent Carbonized-Polymer Microspheres for Unclonable Anti-Counterfeit Whispering-Gallery Emissions from Red to Near-Infrared Wavelengths.
Barun Kumar BarmanHiroyuki YamadaKeisuke WatanabeKenzo DeguchiShinobu OhkiKenjiro HashiAtsushi GotoTadaaki NagaoPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Colloidal carbon dots (CDs) have garnered much attention as metal-free photoluminescent nanomaterials, yet creation of solid-state fluorescent (SSF) materials emitting in the deep red (DR) to near-infrared (NIR) range poses a significant challenge with practical implications. To address this challenge and to engineer photonic functionalities, a micro-resonator architecture is developed using carbonized polymer microspheres (CPMs), evolved from conventional colloidal nanodots. Gram-scale production of CPMs utilizes controlled microscopic phase separation facilitated by natural peptide cross-linking during hydrothermal processing. The resulting microstructure effectively suppresses aggregation-induced quenching (AIQ), enabling strong solid-state light emission. Both experimental and theoretical analysis support a role for extended π-conjugated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) trapped within these microstructures, which exhibit a progressive red shift in light absorption/emission toward the NIR range. Moreover, the highly spherical shape of CPMs endows them with innate photonic functionalities in combination with their intrinsic CD-based attributes. Harnessing their excitation wavelength-dependent photoluminescent (PL) property, a single CPM exhibits whispering-gallery modes (WGMs) that are emission-tunable from the DR to the NIR. This type of newly developed microresonator can serve as, for example, unclonable anti-counterfeiting labels. This innovative cross-cutting approach, combining photonics and chemistry, offers robust, bottom-up, built-in photonic functionality with diverse NIR applications.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- fluorescent probe
- living cells
- quantum dots
- photodynamic therapy
- energy transfer
- drug release
- fluorescence imaging
- high speed
- immune response
- multiple sclerosis
- editorial comment
- signaling pathway
- white matter
- molecularly imprinted
- drug delivery
- heavy metals
- municipal solid waste
- anaerobic digestion
- machine learning
- human health
- artificial intelligence
- risk assessment
- deep learning
- light emitting
- simultaneous determination
- single molecule
- multidrug resistant