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Unexpected luminescence of non-conjugated biomass-based polymers: new approach in photothermal imaging.

Felipe de la Cruz-MartínezRoger Bresolí-ObachIván BravoCarlos Alonso-MorenoDaniel Hermida-MerinoJohan HofkensAgustín Lara-SanchezJosé Antonio Castro-OsmaCristina Martin
Published in: Journal of materials chemistry. B (2022)
Population growth, depletion of world resources and persistent toxic chemical production underline the need to seek new smart materials from inexpensive, biodegradable, and renewable feedstocks. Hence, "metal-free" ring-opening copolymerization to convert biomass carvone-based monomers into non-conventional luminescent biopolymers is considered a sustainable approach to achieve these goals. The non-conventional emission was studied in terms of steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy in order to unravel the structure-properties for different carvone-based copolymers. The results highlighted the importance of the final copolymer folding structure as well as its environment in luminescent behavior (cluster-triggered emission). In all cases, their luminescent behavior is sensitive to small temperature fluctuations (where the minimum detected temperature is T m ∼ 2 °C and relative sensitivity is S r ∼ 6% °C) even at the microscopic scale, which endows these materials a great potential as thermosensitive smart polymers for photothermal imaging.
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