Abstract
Hydrothermal/solvothermal treatments have been widely used to prepare carbonized polymer dots (CPDs) through the condensation and carbonization of small molecules and/or polymers. However, the basic scientific issues, such as the nucleation and growth process, morphology and size control, yield increase, and photoluminescence (PL) mechanism have not been well investigated. In this work, enlightened by the principle of soap-free emulsion polymerization, CPDs with ultrahigh yields (ca. 85 %) were obtained by hydrothermal addition polymerization and carbonization (HAPC) of monomers. The unprecedented initiator-induced addition polymerization was exploited to synthesize CPDs for the first time. As expected in typical emulsion polymerization processes, the developed HAPC method can produce CPDs with designed sizes by systematically regulating the HAPC parameter, uncovering an unprecedented strategy for regulating the size of CPDs. In addition, the obtained CPDs were provided with high photoluminescence quantum yields (PLQY) up to 45.58 %, while the relationship between the photoluminescence (PL) mechanism and chemical structure was investigated. The viscosity parameter was first adopted to measure the polymer property of CPDs. Moreover, the ultrahigh yield and low-cost CPDs elicited the high-performance CPDs/PVA nanocomposite (PVA=poly(vinyl alcohol)) with fluorescence and room-temperature phosphorescence dual-mode emission, demonstrating potential for advanced anti-counterfeit applications.
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