Dual-Peak electrogenerated chemiluminescence of carbon dots for iron ions detection

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Abstract

Carbon dots (CDs) have rigorously been investigated on their unique fluorescent properties but rarely their electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) behavior. We are here to report a dual-peak ECL system of CDs, one at -2.84 V (ECL-1) and the other at -1.71 V (ECL-2) during the cyclic sweep between -3.0 and 3.0 V at scan rate of 0.2 V s-1 in 0.1 M tetrabutyl ammonium bromide (TBAB) ethanol solution, which is more efficiency to distinguish metallic ions than single-peak ECL. The electron transfer reaction between individual electrochemically reduced nanocrystal species and coreactants led to ECL-1, in which the electron injected to the conduction band of CDs in the cathodic process. Ion annihilation reactions induced direct formation of exciplexes that produced another ECL signal, ECL-2. ECL-1 showed higher sensitivity to the surrounding environment than ECL-2 and thus was used for ECL detection of metallic ions. Herein, we can serve as an internal standard method to detect iron ions. A linear relationship of the intensity ratio R of ECL-1 and ECL-2 to iron ions was observed in the concentration extending from 5 × 10-6 to 8 × 10-5 M with a detection limit of 7 × 10-7 M. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

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Zhang, P., Xue, Z., Luo, D., Yu, W., Guo, Z., & Wang, T. (2014). Dual-Peak electrogenerated chemiluminescence of carbon dots for iron ions detection. Analytical Chemistry, 86(12), 5620–5623. https://doi.org/10.1021/ac5011734

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