The preparation of a novel donor-acceptor material, consisting of a red/near-infrared (NIR) absorbing boron azadipyrromethene donor covalently attached to a highly functionalized single-wall carbon nanotube (SWNT) acceptor, which bears great potential in the field of organic photovoltaics, has been demonstrated. Both purification and covalent functionalization of SWNTs have been demonstrated using a number of complementary characterization techniques, including atomic force microscopy, Raman, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Fourier transform infrared, and NIR-photoluminescence spectroscopy, and a functionalization density of approximately 1 donor molecule per 100 SWNT atoms has been estimated by XPS. The redox behavior of the fluorophore has been investigated by electrochemistry and spectroelectrochemistry as well as by pulse radiolysis. The donor-acceptor properties of the material have been characterized by means of various spectroscopic techniques, such as UV-vis NIR absorption spectroscopy, steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, and time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy. Charge transfer from the photoexcited donor to the SWNT acceptor has been confirmed with a radical ion pair state lifetime of about 1.2 ns.
Functionalized carbon nanoparticles (or blacks) have promise as novel active high‐surface‐area electrode materials, as conduits for electrons to enzymes or connections through lipid films, or as nano‐building blocks in electroanalysis. With previous applications of bare nanoblacks and composites mainly in electrochemical charge storage and as substrates in fuel cell devices, the full range of benefits of bare and functionalized carbon nanoparticles in assemblies and composite (bio)electrodes is still emerging. Carbon nanoparticles are readily surface‐modified, functionalized, embedded, or assembled into nanostructures, employed in bioelectrochemical systems, and incorporated into novel electrochemical sensing devices. This focus review summarizes aspects of a rapidly growing field and some of the recent developments in carbon nanoparticle functionalization with potential applications in (bio)electrochemical, photoelectrochemical, and electroanalytical processes.
A novel two-photon-fluorescent N,O-heteroatom-rich carbon nanomaterial has been synthesized and characterized. The new carbon nanoparticles were produced by hydrothermal conversion from a one-photon-fluorescent poly(4-vinylpyridine) precursor (P4VP). The carbonized particles (cP4VP dots) with nonuniform particle diameter (ranging from sub-6 to 20 nm with some aggregates up to 200 nm) exhibit strong fluorescence properties in different solvents and have also been investigated for applications in cell culture media. The cP4VP dots retain their intrinsic fluorescence in a cellular environment and exhibit an average excited-state lifetime of 2.0 ± 0.9 ns in the cell. The cP4VP dots enter HeLa cells and do not cause significant damage to outer cell membranes. They provide one-photon or two-photon fluorescent synthetic scaffolds for imaging applications and/or drug delivery.
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