Abstract
Black liquor is an important pollutant in the pulp industry, but it also has the potential for high-value utilization. In this study, lignin extracted from black liquor was hydrothermally prepared into lignin-based carbon quantum dots (L-CQDs) using a one-pot method. Physicochemical characterization suggested that the L-CQDs exhibited a lamellar core-shell multilayered graphene structure surrounded by oxygen-containing functional groups. The fluorescence intensity of the L-CQDs was strengthened depending on their own concentration dependence and the doping of external groups. The fluorescence intensity of L-CQDs varied between 89.09 and 183.66 under different concentrations, and the most intense fluorescence (183.66) was obtained at 0.1 mg mL-1. At hydroxyl and amino adsorption capacities of 11.08 and 0.98 mmol g-1, the hydroxylated RL-CQDs-5 and aminated NL-CQDs-3 exhibited the highest fluorescence intensities at 689.22 and 605.39, respectively. Moreover, when pristine L-CQDs were sequentially aminated and hydroxylated, the NRL-CQDs' fluorescence intensity reached 1224.92. Cell imaging experiments proved that cells cultivated with NRL-CQDs have brighter fluorescence compared with L-CQDs. The results will render L-CQDs more suitable for practical applications.
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