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Influence of Carbon-Nitride Dot-Emitting Species and Evolution on Fluorescence-Based Sensing and Differentiation

ACS Sensors

Westphal, Eric R.; Plackowski, Kenneth M.; Holzmann, Michael J.; Ghosh, Koushik; Outka, Alexandra M.; Chen, Dongchang

Carbon dots have attracted widespread interest for sensing applications based on their low cost, ease of synthesis, and robust optical properties. We investigate structure-function evolution on multiemitter fluorescence patterns for model carbon-nitride dots (CNDs) and their implications on trace-level sensing. Hydrothermally synthesized CNDs with different reaction times were used to determine how specific functionalities and their corresponding fluorescence signatures respond upon the addition of trace-level analytes. Archetype explosives molecules were chosen as a testbed due to similarities in substituent groups or inductive properties (i.e., electron withdrawing), and solution-based assays were performed using ratiometric fluorescence excitation-emission mapping (EEM). Analyte-specific quenching and enhancement responses were observed in EEM landscapes that varied with the CND reaction time. We then used self-organizing map models to examine EEM feature clustering with specific analytes. The results reveal that interactions between carbon-nitride frameworks and molecular-like species dictate response characteristics that may be harnessed to tailor sensor development for specific applications.

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Probing photochemical kinetics and mechanisms using photoNMR

Darby, Daniel R.; Gruenwald, Hannah K.; Holzmann, Michael J.; Commisso, Alex J.; Fairchild, David C.; Leguizamon, Samuel C.; Fritzsching, Keith; Appelhans, Leah

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) is a form of spectroscopy that yields detailed mechanistic information about chemical structures, reactions, and processes. Photochemistry has widespread use across many industries and holds excellent utility for additive manufacturing (AM) processes. Here, we use photoNMR to investigate three photochemical processes spanning AM relevant timescales. We first investigate the photodecomposition of a photobase generator on the slow timescale, then the photoactivation of a ruthenium catalyst on the intermediate timescale, and finally the radical polymerization of an acrylate system on the fast timescale. In doing so, we gain fundamental insights to mission relevant photochemistries and develop a new spectroscopic capability at SNL.

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2 Results
2 Results