Fluorescent property of carbon dots extracted from cigarette smoke and the application in bio-imaging
Yuzhao Li, Han Bai, Jin Zhang, Ju Tang, Yingfu Li, Weizuo Zhang,, Zhexian Zhao, Yiming Xiao, and Yanfei L\"u

TL;DR
This study extracts fluorescent carbon dots from cigarette smoke, enhances their properties through reduction, and demonstrates their potential for bio-imaging applications with low toxicity and high fluorescence.
Contribution
It is the first to extract and modify cigarette smoke-derived carbon dots for effective bio-imaging, highlighting their potential in cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Findings
Cigarette smoke contains nanoscale carbon dots with strong fluorescence.
Reduction with sodium borohydride significantly increases fluorescence intensity.
R-CDs can penetrate cells and visualize cell structures clearly.
Abstract
Cigarette smoke is one of the six major pollution sources in the room air. It contains large number of particles with size less than 10 nm. There exist carbon dots (CDs) in cigarette smoke which have strong fluorescence and with good bio-compatibility and low toxicity. CDs in cigarette smoke can be applied in bio-imaging which has great potential applications in the integration of cancer diagnosis and treatment. In this paper, CDs were extracted from cigarette smoke. Then, sodium borohydride was added to CDs aqueous solution for reduction and the reduced CDs (R-CDs) were used for biological cell imaging. The results indicate that the CDs with the particle size 10 nm in cigarette smoke are self-assembled by the polymerizated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and ammonium nitrite which are disk nano-structure composed of / carbon and oxygen/nitrogen groups or…
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