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Synthesizing luminescent carbon from condensed tobacco smoke: bio-waste for possible bioimaging

Authors :
Tanushree Ghosh
Suchita Kandpal
Chanchal Rani
Devesh K. Pathak
Manushree Tanwar
Shweta Jakhmola
Hem C. Jha
Maxim Yu Maximov
Anjali Chaudhary
Rajesh Kumar
Source :
Canadian Journal of Chemistry. 100:545-551
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Canadian Science Publishing, 2022.

Abstract

Used cigarette filters, a waste material and a major source of land pollution, were used as raw material to study the nature of condensed tobacco smoke (tar) using microscopy, optical, IR, photoluminescence, and Raman spectroscopy, as well as X-ray diffraction and electron and fluorescence microscopy. The tar present in the cigarette filter bud was used to synthesize luminescent low dimensional carbon using a simple methanol extraction technique. The collected material shows light blue emission under UV excitation with emission peak energy depending strongly on the excitation wavelength. Such excitation energy dependent emission is observed from the extract solution and the dried film. Careful analysis was carried out to understand its origin, which revealed the presence of a giant red-edge effect in the samples. A correlation between room temperature photoluminescence spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy was carried out. The presence of amorphous phase carbon was established using Raman spectroscopy, and a quantum yield of more than 9% was estimated, which was moderately high in comparison with the one shown by carbon dots prepared by using other sources and can be used for bioimaging applications.

Details

ISSN :
14803291 and 00084042
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c2bed6b2b5814f5a8694acd0e9eef52a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1139/cjc-2021-0339