Inorganic Acid Catalysed Nitrogen-doped Carbon Dots from Kraft Lignin
Waste and their Brain Cell Imaging Applications
Abstract
Carbon quantum dots (C-QDs) show great potential to replace traditional
semiconductive quantum dots as the next generation of fluorescent
probes. We demonstrate here a new C-QD production process using lignin,
a high-volume but low market-value industrial waste and/or environmental
hazards, as the starting carbon source. By adding a small amount of
inorganic acid, the rich phenolic components in lignin were successfully
converted to C-QDs through a coking formation mechanism similar to what
happens on solid acid catalysts in traditional fossil fuel cracking
process. The aqueous solution presence of the received lignin C-QDs is
beneficial for brain cell imaging applications, attributing to their
fast internalization, low toxicity, tunable photoluminescence by
appropriate acidity and reaction temperature during hydrothermal
synthesis. This method not only provides a low-cost C-QDs production
route, but also helps gain extra profit and/or improve environment for
many small agricultural business and paper and pulp industry located in
rural area.