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Polaron engineering promotes NIR-II absorption of carbon quantum dots for bioimaging and cancer therapy.


ABSTRACT: Recent years have witnessed a surge of interest in tuning the optical properties of organic semiconductors for diverse applications. However, achieving control over the optical bandgap in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) window has remained a major challenge. To address this, here we report a polaron engineering strategy that introduces diverse defects into carbon quantum dots (CQDs). These defects induce lattice distortions resulting in the formation of polarons, which can absorb the near-field scattered light. Furthermore, the formed polarons in N-related vacancies can generate thermal energy through the coupling of lattice vibrations, while the portion associated with O-related defects can return to the ground state in the form of NIR-II fluorescence. On the basis of this optical absorption model, these CQDs have been successfully applied to NIR-II fluorescence imaging and photothermal therapy. This discovery could open a promising route for the polarons of organic semiconductor materials as NIR-II absorbers in nanomedical applications.

SUBMITTER: Zhang T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC11225785 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Polaron engineering promotes NIR-II absorption of carbon quantum dots for bioimaging and cancer therapy.

Zhang Tesen T   Wang Bingzhe B   Cheng Quansheng Q   Wang Qingcheng Q   Zhou Qingqing Q   Li Lingyun L   Qu Songnan S   Sun Handong H   Deng Chuxia C   Tang Zikang Z  

Science advances 20240705 27


Recent years have witnessed a surge of interest in tuning the optical properties of organic semiconductors for diverse applications. However, achieving control over the optical bandgap in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) window has remained a major challenge. To address this, here we report a polaron engineering strategy that introduces diverse defects into carbon quantum dots (CQDs). These defects induce lattice distortions resulting in the formation of polarons, which can absorb the near-fiel  ...[more]

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