Finally, the PL mechanisms of DHQP and CDs are carefully analyzed as shown in
Fig. 2. The reason for the greater contribution of 285 nm excitation to red emission for DHQP is that the
π-π* transition here corresponds to an energy level transition between S
0 and S
2, where the excited electrons decay to the lowest vibrational energy level of S
1 via internal conversion (ic) and vibrational relaxation, and then return to S
0 via 0–0, 0–1, and 0–2 radiative emission transitions (
Fig. 2a). In the case of CDs, DHQP is connected or embedded with the carbon core
via the sp
3 substrate, and DHQP on CDs dominates the photoluminescent behavior. However, the absorption peak at 285 nm contributes less to the red emission, probably due to the transfer of excited electrons to the energy level of CDs (S
n), which is mainly a non-radiative transition. The new excitation energy level S
n is associated with an absorption band at 318 nm and 366 nm, between S
1 and S
2. Electrons from S
2 can be transferred to the S
n of CDs, competing with the internal transition between S
2 and S
1, resulting in a decrease in the intensity of PL excited by the 285 nm band (
Fig. 2b).