Abstract

Biocompatible Carbon dots (CDs) were obtained by the laser irradiation of vegetable carbon placed in a Phosphate-Buffered Saline (PBS) solution. The carbon nanoparticles were generated by a visible and continuum wave (CW) He-Ne laser beam at a 632.8 nm wavelength with 1 mm2 spot, irradiating the carbon target for times of the order of some hours. The CDs generation might be due to thermal effects induced by the prolonged laser irradiation inducing carbon atoms ejection bounded by weak van de Walls forces. Ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) spectroscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) transmittance and luminescence measurements were employed to study the CDs synthesize. The UV excitation at a 365 nm wavelength induces visible CDs luminescence mainly at about 474 nm wavelength, giving the emitted light a characteristic blue color. The CDs luminescence in biocompatible solutions is presented and discussed in anticipation of possible applications in various sectors, such as radiation detector and material physics, engineering, microelectronics, sensors and, above all, in relation to bio-images from cell cultures and biological tissue as possible applications to the bio-medical field.

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