The functional groups were characterized by Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS).
Fig. 3c shows the FT-IR absorption band at 3505 cm
−1 is assigned to the O–H stretching vibration. The absorption band at 2651 cm
−1 is ascribed to S-H stretching vibration and the absorption band at 1677 cm
−1 is ascribed to C=N/C=O stretching vibration. Besides, CDs obtained by solvothermal synthesis reserve the S-S bond at 554 cm
−1. These functional groups could play roles in serving as sub-fluorophores for producing PL. In
Fig. 3d and Table S2 (Supporting information), the full XPS spectra display five typical peaks at 164, 228, 285, 400 and 532 eV for S 2p, S 2s, C 1s, N 1s, and O 1s, respectively, indicating that all the CDs consisted of the same elements. In the high resolution XPS spectra (Fig. S1 and Table S3 in Supporting information), the S 2p spectra display three peaks at 162.7, 163.1 and 164.1 eV which can be attributed to S-C, S-H, and S-S, respectively. These three high-resolution spectra collectively indicate the successful insertion of S and N atoms into these CDs. However, the nitrogen content in o-CDs and p-CDs is low, the nitrogen in m-CDs contains two peaks at 398.9 and 399.6 eV, ascribing to graphite nitrogen and N-H (Fig. S1). The QY of o-CDs, m-CDs, and p-CDs is 4.05%, 20.77%, and 1.76%, which is attributed to the synergistic effect between carbon and nitrogen (Table S4 in Supporting information). The C 1s band can be deconvoluted into four binding energy peaks at 283.7, 284.3 and 288.1 eV, which could be assigned to C-C/C=C, C-N/C-O and C=N/C=O, respectively (Fig. S1 and Table S5 in Supporting information). The O 1s spectra contain two peaks at 531.1 and 533.3 eV for C=O and C-OH/C-O-C bands, respectively (Fig. S1 and Table S6 in Supporting information). The atomic ratio between carbon and oxygen decreases from 11.09% (o-CDs) to 5.47% (p-CDs), suggesting a decreasing degree of graphitization in these CDs (Table S2). Moreover, the C=O gradually decreases from 63.85% (o-CDs) to 42.58% (p-CDs), implying emission red-shift may be related to C=O on the surface of CDs. In brief, o-CDs, m-CDs, and p-CDs have abundant oxygen/nitrogen surface groups, and the CD's particle sizes decrease and their PL emission shift from red to blue. To further reveal the photoluminescence mechanism of CDs, we analyzed the PL spectra of CDs in solution as shown in Fig. S2 (Supporting information). When water is introduced, the hydrophobic effect causes the aggregation of CDs, so the CDs maintain their SSF characteristics in water. When dissolved in acetic acid, o-CDs, m-CDs, and p-CDs exhibit blue, green, and blue fluorescence, respectively. These phenomena reveal that o-CDs conform to the phenomenon of aggregation-induced emission (AIE) [
21]. The surface groups of o-CDs may rotate around the intramolecular S-S bonds and consume the absorbed energy in the dissolved state, so o-CDs solution will not produce red fluorescence and exhibit similar PL characteristics as the reported blue emission CDs. However, in the solid-state, as a result of the intramolecular rotation being banned, the excitation energy can transfer dominantly into fluorescence [
21]. When fully dispersed as a homogeneous solution, m-CDs and p-CDs do not conform to the AIE phenomenon and exhibit the same luminous color as solid.