Abstract

Room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) materials are desirable in chemical sensing because of their long emission lifetime and they are free from background autofluorescence. Nevertheless, the achievement of RTP in aqueous solution is still a highly challenging task. Herein, a molten salt method to prepare carbon dot (CD)-based RTP materials is presented by direct calcination of carbon sources in the presence of inorganic salts. The resultant CD composites (CDs@MP) exhibit bright RTP with a quantum yield of 26.4% and a lifetime of 1.28 s, which lasts for about 6 s to the naked eye. Importantly, their aqueous dispersion also has good RTP characteristics. This is the first time that the long-lived CDs@MP with RTP are achieved in aqueous solution owing to the synergistic effect of crystalline confinement and aggregation-induced phosphorescence. Further investigations reveal that three key processes may be responsible for the observed RTP of the composite materials: (1) The rigid crystalline salt shell can preserve the triplet states of CDs@MP in water and suppress the nonradiative deactivation; (2) The addition of high-charge-density metal ions Mg(II) and phosphorus element in the composite facilitates the singlet-to-triplet intersystem crossing process and enhances the RTP emission; (3) The aggregation of CDs@MP nanocomposites enables the matrix shell to self-assemble into a network, which further improves the rigidity of the shell and prevents the intermolecular motions, hence prolonging the RTP lifetime. The unique RTP feature and good water dispersibility allow the CD-based composite materials to be applicable in detection of temperature and pH in the aqueous phase. Our approach for producing long-lived RTP CDs@MP is effective, simple, and low-cost, which opens a new route to develop RTP materials that are applicable in aqueous solution.

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