Fluorescent Carbon Quantum Dots (FCQDs), a new generation of carbon nanomaterials, have attracted a lot of attention throughout the years. This paper applied a straightforward and environmentally beneficial way to create water-soluble FCQDs hydrothermally from coconut shells. The as-prepared FCQDs have desirable functional groups and exhibit strong blue-emitting fluorescence with a relative quantum yield of 0.6 and 0.7%. The optical bandgap of FCQDs is calculated using UV–Vis spectra to be between 3.9 and 4.4 eV. Optical studies show that FCQDs have good fluorescence properties when excited at 360 nm. Whereas the fluorescence decay lifetime using TCSPC are 1.6–0.99 ns. The synthesized FCQDs were found by HRTEM to have a spherical shape and a particle-size distribution of 2.8–5.4 nm. As-prepared FCQDs has a very low hemotoxicity of 0.5 to 1.3%, which indicates that they have acceptable biocompatibility and are not hazardous. According to the DPPH antioxidant data, FCQDs had a stronger antioxidant activity compared to earlier reports. These important characteristics enable its applications in biomedical, food packaging, fluorescence imaging, photocatalysis, and sensing. The enhanced antioxidant characteristics of the produced FCQDs make them appropriate for use in biomedical, bioimaging, chemical, and industrial applications. The as-synthesized FCQDs were used for the detection of ferric ions with good selectivity.
Highly luminescent carbon quantum dots (CQDs) are developed as fluorescent probes for selective detection of the heavy-ion Fe3+, where the CQDs exhibit excellent nontoxicity, functionalizability, sensitivity, and selectivity. Biomass-based CQDs and nitrogen-doped CQDs (N-CQDs) are synthesized for the selective detection of Fe3+ by using H2O2 as an oxidant and polyetherimide (PEI) as a nitrogen precursor by a green hydrothermal synthesis method. The prepared CQDs and N-CQDs exhibit an elliptical morphology and with an average particle size of 7 and 4 nm, respectively, and emit blue photoluminescence at 445 and 468 nm under excitation at 367 and 343 nm, respectively. The CQDs and N-CQDs exhibit good water solubility because of the abundant hydroxyl and carboxyl/carbonyl groups and graphic/pyrrolic/pyridinic nitrogen on the surfaces, giving rise to a quantum yield of about 24.2% and 30.7%, respectively. Notably, the Matrimony vine-PEI-based CQDs exhibit excellent Fe3+ selectivity and sensitivity relative to the Matrimony vine-based CQDs due to complexation of the numerous phenolic hydroxyl groups and nitrogen-containing groups with Fe3+, leading to increased fluorescence quenching, which greatly improves the sensitivity of detection. The minimum detection limit was 2.22 μmol L− 1 with a complexation constant of 44.7.