Carbon 04 00067
Carbon 04 00067
Carbon 04 00067
Carbon Research
Review
Carbon Nanodots: A Review—From the Current
Understanding of the Fundamental Photophysics to
the Full Control of the Optical Response
Alice Sciortino 1,2,3, *, Andrea Cannizzo 3, * and Fabrizio Messina 1, *
1 Dipartimento di Fisica e Chimica, Università degli Studi di Palermo, Via Archirafi 36, 90123 Palermo, Italy
2 Dipartimento di Fisica ed Astronomia, Università degli Studi di Catania, Via Santa Sofia 64,
95123 Catania, Italy
3 Institute of Applied Physics, University of Bern, Sidlerstrasse 5, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
* Correspondence: alicesciortino@gmail.com (A.S.); andrea.cannizzo@iap.unibe.ch (A.C.);
fabrizio.messina@unipa.it (F.M.)
Received: 6 November 2018; Accepted: 5 December 2018; Published: 13 December 2018
Abstract: Carbon dots (CDs) are an emerging family of nanosystems displaying a range of fascinating
properties. Broadly speaking, they can be described as small, surface-functionalized carbonaceous
nanoparticles characterized by an intense and tunable fluorescence, a marked sensitivity to the
environment and a range of interesting photochemical properties. CDs are currently the subject of
very intense research, motivated by their possible applications in many fields, including bioimaging,
solar energy harvesting, nanosensing, light-emitting devices and photocatalyis. This review covers
the latest advancements in the field of CDs, with a focus on the fundamental understanding of
their key photophysical behaviour, which is still very debated. The photoluminescence mechanism,
the origin of their peculiar fluorescence tunability, and their photo-chemical interactions with coupled
systems are discussed in light of the latest developments in the field, such as the most recent results
obtained by femtosecond time-resolved experiments, which have led to important steps forward in
the fundamental understanding of CDs. The optical response of CDs appears to stem from a very
complex interplay between the electronic states related to the core structure and those introduced by
surface functionalization. In addition, the structure of CD energy levels and the electronic dynamics
triggered by photo-excitation finely depend on the microscopic structure of any specific sub-type of
CD. On the other hand, this remarkable variability makes CDs extremely versatile, a key benefit in
view of their very wide range of applications.
1. Introduction
Carbon nanodots (CDs), discovered in the mid-2000s [1,2], are one of the protagonists of carbon
nanoscience. CDs are nanoparticles smaller than ≈10 nm (Figure 1) typically composed by carbon,
oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen. Their most important hallmark is a bright fluorescence, tunable across
the visible range, which has revolutionized the traditional paradigm of carbon as a black material
unable to emit light. Their luminescence is accompanied by many additional benefits, such as low cost,
ease of synthesis, high water solubility, biocompatibility, non-toxicity, high sensitivity to the external
environment, and marked electron donating and accepting capabilities. This combination of properties
allows for using CDs in a very broad range of applications, across many different fields ranging from
optoelectronics to sensing. In fact, the potential of CDs is evident from the explosion of the number
of studies, currently ranging in the thousands per year. From the practical point of view, the optical
properties of CDs are somehow comparable, and often competitive, to fluorescent semiconductor
quantum dots (QDs). Compared to them, luminescent CDs are superior in terms of aqueous solubility,
high resistance to photobleaching, low toxicity and good biocompatibility [3]. In addition, they do not
usually show blinking effects [4], they display strong absorption in the blue and UV ranges, and their
reported QYs are steadily increasing, due to the progressive improvement of the synthesis procedures.
Figure 1. (a) transmission electron microscopy image of CDs; (b) size distribution of CDs;
(c,d) examples of single crystalline CDs from (a). Reproduced with permission from [5]. Copyright
Elsevier, 2016. (e) example of tunable fluorescence of CDs photographed during the photoexcitation at
different wavelengths (indicated in figure). Reproduced with permission from [6]. Copyright John
Wiley and Sons, 2015.
From a structural viewpoint, CDs are a relatively wide family of nanomaterials with a range
of possible structures and variable optical properties. Their morphology is mostly quasi-spherical,
and the structure can be graphitic [1], amorphous [7], or characterized by a C3 N4 crystalline core [8–10].
Even graphene quantum dots (GQDs), which can be pictured as nanometer-size fragments of
monolayer graphene [11], may probably be considered a special sub-type of CDs because they display
very similar photophysics despite the two-dimensional morphology. In all the synthesis approaches,
the surface of CDs is passivated (during or after synthesis) by external agents [12], forming a layer of
functional groups or molecules which bind to the carbonaceous core. The passivation layer should be
considered as an integral part of the structure and function of CDs, which, in particular cases, can be
as thick as a few nanometers [13]. Thereby, depending on the specific surface structures, CDs can be
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hydrophilic or hydrophobic [14,15]. As for the optical properties, different synthesis procedures yield
subtypes of CDs capable of emitting fluorescence at different wavelengths. In fact, CDs can emit
blue [16], green [1], or red light [17], and their fluorescence can be either independent of the excitation
wavelength [18,19], or more commonly “tunable”, in the sense that the emission peak continuously
shifts as a function of the excitation wavelength [20]. Their fluorescence intensity can be sensitive to
one particular ion in solution [21,22], or it can respond to a variety of interactions with other systems,
such as carbon nanotubes (CNTs) [7].
Overall, CDs exist in different sub-types with different core and surface structure, stoichiometry
(C content ranges from 50% to 80%), and different specific optical characteristics. The main two
characteristics which are truly recurrent in every type of CD are the small size (≈10 nm or less) and
the surface functionalization layer, which is typically very dense and disordered [23]. Both of these
features seem to be crucial to obtain CDs capable of visible photoluminescence with high emission
efficiency. In particular, many studies have provided strong evidence that the passivating layer is
mandatory for CDs to display a high luminescence, although the surface groups are not fluorescent
by themselves.
Independently of the structural complexity, photoluminescence is certainly the most intriguing
and, at the same time, the most unclear characteristic of these nanosystems. CD fluorescence is usually
very strong [18,24–27], tunable [1,6,26,28–30], and sensitive to local environment: solvents [31,32],
ions [22,33,34], pH [35], external agents such as carbon nanotubes (CNTs) [7,36]. Moreover, it usually
occurs only when the nanoparticles are well dispersed. In fact, aggregation seems to turn off the
emission [37,38]. Usually, electronic absorption of CDs covers both UV- and visible range. This allows to
photo-excite CDs in a very broad spectral range, upon which one typically observes the tunability of
the emission: the position of the emission peak changes with the excitation wavelength (Figure 1).
This provides a multi-color emission spanning all the visible, although the absorption and the emission
efficiencies usually decrease at longer wavelengths [39]. This emission is often characterized by a
high quantum yield, which, however, strongly depends on the synthesis conditions. Many works
demonstrate that this emission is very sensitive to the external environment and strongly responds to
its changes [7,32,40–42]. For instance, CDs show a clear dependence of the emission band (peak and/or
shape) on the solvent polarity (solvatochromic behaviour) [32,43]. In addition, CDs strongly respond to
metal ions in solution. In fact, their fluorescence can be either quenched or enhanced in presence of
metal cations (Hg2+ , Cu2+ , Fe3+ , Ag+ , ...), the specific response being strongly dependent on the
particular structure of CD. Some CDs are also sensitive to other agents in solution as CNTs [7] or
various molecules [40–42].
Carbon dots research is still in a developing phase despite thousands of studies have already
been published on the subject, and several scientific open questions exist about their optical behaviour,
the fundamental nature of the electronic states, the key factors determining their bright fluorescence,
and the relation between structure and emission. Therefore, a large effort is in progress to find the most
effective ways to tailor CDs for specific applications. While several review papers have been already
published on CDs [4,44–51] focusing on different aspects of the field, this work specifically focuses on
the most fundamental aspects of the photophysics and photochemistry of CDs, currently the subject of a
large debate. After a brief presentation (Section 2) of the main synthesis methods, structural properties,
and applications of CDs, the core of this paper is contained in Section 3, which aims to summarize
the current understanding of CD photophysics, from their fundamental emission features to their
interactions with coupled systems.
Figure 2. Representation of the possible synthesis methods to prepare carbon dots. Reproduced with
permission from [52]. Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, 2017.
Top-down methods involve the disruption of bulk carbon precursors or nanomaterials with higher
dimensionality than CDs (considered zero-dimensional), such as graphite (bulk) or carbon nanotubes
(1D material). Several methods can be used to transform these precursors into CDs (Figure 2), such as
laser ablation [1], electrochemical synthesis [34], arc discharge [2], or chemical oxidation [23,28].
In general, the products from these types of synthesis are not immediately fluorescent. However,
they can be typically transformed into highly fluorescent CDs by passivating their surface with various
polar moieties after synthesis, as reported by many groups [1,28]. Bottom-up syntheses usually exploit
the carbonization (more or less complete) of different molecular precursors, as citric acid [53] or
sucrose [54]. The carbonization of these compounds, typically chosen for their low melting points,
can be carried out at relatively low temperatures to produce CDs the characteristics of which strongly
depend on the reaction conditions. Besides “pure” carbon-core CDs, mixing the carbon sources
with other molecular precursors, as urea [8] and thiourea [55] can be used as a method to dope the
structure of CDs with nitrogen, sulphur, or other heteroatoms.
One important benefit of top-down synthesis routes is that the obtained CDs typically have
simple and well-defined structures (e.g., graphitic nanosphere) that leave no room for structural
ambiguity [56]. In contrast, bottom-up methods can be much harder to control: various side products
(e.g., small fluorescent molecules) can be formed along with CDs, hence the need for a careful
purification after synthesis. However, bottom-up synthesis methods bear their own advantages.
On one hand, they are particularly simple and surface passivation can be usually achieved in “one
pot” without the need of post-synthesis chemical processing. In fact, the surface of as-synthesized
CDs via the most popular bottom-up procedures, spontaneously achieves the appropriate structure
needed for an intense fluorescence. In addition, while the structure of CDs obtained by top-down
synthesis typically resembles the structure of the precursors (e.g., graphitic CDs from laser ablation
or chemical oxidation of graphite [1,23,34,56]), bottom-up routes are more versatile and yield a
much larger variety of CD structures (see Section 2.2), especially with combined with doping
strategies. The following paragraphs provide several representative examples of some widespread CD
preparation methods.
ablation of a graphite target under certain conditions produces an aggregate of carbon nanoparticles
[1,58]. Only after an acidic treatment of the surface and the following surface passivation by organic
molecules, these carbon nanoparticles become bright luminescent and, therefore, can be described
as “carbon dots” [1]. Later, many other works have been conducted on the synthesis of CDs via laser
ablation routes, aiming to improve the control on the characteristics of the synthesized materials.
As is well-known for other nanomaterials [57], changing laser ablation parameters provides a
way to control the CD characteristics. For example, Hu et al. [59] carried out a one-step synthesis of
CDs from graphite flakes in polymer solution, and found that changing pulse duration from 0.3 ms to
1.5 ms of a 1064 nm laser beam allows to tailor CDs size from 3 nm to 13 nm. These CD sub-sets present
different morphology and various core structures: while the smallest particles are single mono-crystals,
larger CDs are composed by multiple crystalline grains, and show a quantum yield which decreases
with increasing size. A passivation procedure is not needed after this synthesis procedure, suggesting
that surface passivation probably occurs simultaneously to the formation of nanoparticles, caused by
the interaction of the ablation plume with the polymeric solution. Varying pulse duration seems to
change the conditions of the nucleation and growth process and, therefore, changes the size distribution.
Other works demonstrated that also laser wavelength is a key parameter during the ablation of a
target. In Ref. [60], the authors demonstrate that ablating graphite with a wavelength in the UV-range
(355 nm) produces 5 nm-sized crystalline CDs without the formation of any aggregates, whereas the
use of a beam at 532 nm or 1064 nm produces plenty of carbon aggregates. In addition, in this case,
no post-synthesis functionalization is needed to obtain highly fluorescent CDs. In fact, the laser
ablation is performed in acetone solution, wherein the laser interaction with the solvent probably
induces the formation of radicals through the dissociation of solvent molecules, and their subsequent
attachment to the surface of the nanoparticles, inducing their functionalization with ketone groups.
Moreover, the authors studied the influence of the irradiation time and found a peak of emission
efficiency after 150 s of ablation which decreases with longer times.
The most common purification methods are dialysis [86,87] used to purificate a sample
from small impurities, centrifugation [88], mostly used to remove any aggregates, size exclusion
chromatography [10,89–91], and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) [25,92].
Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) has been used in many works to separate CDs by their size.
In Ref. [89], the authors take advantage of this to obtain two fractions with different morphological
and optical properties. In particular, they succeed in having two distinct CD samples which emit
respectively in the green (the smaller) or in the blue (the bigger). In Ref. [10], SEC was used to produce
a monodisperse sample with relatively narrow size distribution, a well-defined crystalline structure
and exceptionally homogeneous optical properties. Arcudi et al. [90] used SEC in order to obtain a
quasi-monodispersed samples, and, in Ref. [92], the authors used HPLC to obtain different fractions
with different optical features which can be related to the size of the samples.
Figure 3. Schematic representation of commonly reported CD structures. Black and red dots represent
Carbon and Nitrogen atoms, respectively.
Figure 4. Transmission electron microscopy (a) and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy
image (b) of CDs with graphitic core structure; the average lattice spacing of these CDs is 0.21 nm which
is compatible with the (100) planes of graphite. Reproduced from [96] under the Creative Commons
Attribution Licence (CC BY 4.0).
HRTEM usually needs to be combined with atomic force microscopy (AFM) to have full
information not only on the crystalline core structure but also on the three-dimensional morphology,
allowing in particular to discriminate graphitic CDs from GQDs [11,92,97]. The latter are not spherical
particles but are small disks made by 1–3 layers of graphene stacked on each other. However,
their optical characteristics are typically very similar to spherical CDs, and their fundamental
understanding is equally unsatisfactory. In fact, the extent to which GQDs should be considered
as a truly different system from CDs is still debated.
Going back to CDs, those with crystalline cores are not limited to a graphitic structure. In fact,
other possible structures were reported for CDs synthesized in special conditions, particularly at
high levels of N doping, where several groups reported CDs with carbon nitride structures, either in
a graphitic- or β- crystalline arrangement (g-C3 N4 or β-C3 N4 ) [8,10,33,83]. Recent studies have
demonstrated that the carbon nitride core structure appears when the amount of nitrogen dopants
overcomes a defined threshold, above which the core structure is forced to diverge from its graphitic
nature [68]. Notably, the two variants of carbon nitride CDs described in the literature are very
different from each other: g-C3 N4 is a layered material similar to graphite, in which each layer
consists in the repetition of a structural motif consisting in three hexagonal rings where carbon and
nitrogen atoms in sp2 hybridization are alternated (Figure 3). In contrast, β-C3 N4 is an hexagonal
network of tetrahedral bonded (sp3 ) C atoms connected to trigonal sp2 nitrogen atoms. Despite being
a sp3 -C material, the emission properties of β-C3 N4 dots are consistent with all the other types of
CDs, showing the typically broad and tunable emission. In particular, β-C3 N4 dots are very different
from nanodiamonds [98], which have almost pure sp3 -C cores, very large (>5 eV) electronic bandgaps,
and emit a characteristically narrow luminescence due to various point defects.
In addition, for the crystalline varieties, it is also possible to find many examples of amorphous
CDs [7,14,20,64,99–101], which contain a mixture of sp2 and sp3 hybridized carbon, in variable
proportions, and without any long periodicity in the core. Except for the core structure, however,
they apparently exhibit rather similar characteristics with respect to crystalline dots, such as high
fluorescence. Among the amorphous varieties, another possible core structure has been recently
proposed for some CDs synthesized by bottom-up procedures. This core structure involves the
aggregation of small molecules which are formed usually during the carbonization of citric acid (a very
popular precursos for CDs) [102,103], and kept together in a quasi-spherical shape by comparatively
weak interactions, like π − π, H-bonds, Van der Waals.
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Until now, only a core classification was presented. In addition, the surface of the dots can be
very variable and hosts a variety of functional groups, mostly identified by infrared absorption (IR),
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA). Generally speaking,
the surface functional groups establish if the sample is hydrophilic or hydrophobic [14,104].
Hydrophylic CDs are much more common, and usually display very polyfunctional and disordered
surface structures, characterized by an abundance of small polar groups, such as Hydroxyl, Carboxyl,
Carboxylate, Amine, and Amide. Besides “standard” polar groups, some authors passivated the
surface with more complex molecules, as polyethylene glycol (PEG), or polyethyleneimine (a long
chain molecule which contains primary, secondary and tertiary amine groups), still obtaining highly
fluorescent CDs [29,35,99,105]. The high water solubility (typically several g/L) of most CDs is a
characteristic, which is very useful for many applications.
As already mentioned, it is widely accepted that the presence of a proper surface passivation
is mandatory to have bright fluorescence from CDs. In fact, deliberate chemical passivation of the
surface is often necessary after the synthesis (especially through top-down routes) in order to obtain
highly fluorescent CDs [1,36,93,94,106]. Based on the major influence of the surface passivation on
the fluorescence, and considering that both amorphous and crystalline dots display a similar optical
phenomenology, it may seem that the core has a negligible influence on the emission mechanism and
that only the surface plays a key role in the emission. Despite of this, some authors [107,108] provided
evidence that the core can be as fundamental in the photocycle of CDs as the surface. These issues
will be discussed in more detail in Section 3.
2.3. Applications
Because of their unique blend of properties, CDs are very promising for many applications.
They offer the perspective of a C-based equivalent of optically-active quantum dots (QDs) with the
additional benefits of C-based materials, as the absence of toxic elements (typically heavy metal atoms)
which limit, in particular, the use of QDs in bio-oriented applications. The bright emission of CDs,
combined with the marked electron-donor capability can be exploited for instance in optoelectronic
devices [45,105,109–111]. The sensitivity of the emission to metal ions in solution can be exploited to
create nanosensors capable of recognizing different cations [26,112–117]. Their non-toxicity is a key
advantage to perform in vivo [118–122] and in vitro [41,67,113,123–125] bioimaging experiments
and drug delivery experiments [126]. Indeed, the range of applications of CDs is surprisingly wide:
for example, antiviral [127,128] and antibacterial [129] properties of CDs were recently discovered,
and CDs were even used as nanoweapons against mosquitos [130], or as a component of fluorescent
inks [53,89]. So far, the majority of CDs-based devices have been developed and tested just in a
laboratory environment. However, their commercial and industrial exploitation should not be too
far away. The next paragraphs illustrate the technological versatility of CDs through a selection of
different possible applications.
as low as femtomolar [138]. However, the fundamental causes of quenching are very debated and
may involve different fundamental interactions, such as a charge transfer from the dot to the ions,
which hinders radiative recombination [139], or an energy transfer from the dots to the acceptor,
quenching the emission of CDs and enhancing the emission of the latter [140,141]. Because of such a
poor understanding, the engineering of these applications still proceeds mostly through trial-and-error
routes. Only in recent times, the use of the appropriate advanced methods, such as femtosecond
spectroscopy is beginning to shed light on the fundamental mechanisms behind these interactions of
CDs, as will be discussed in more detail in Section 3.4.
As compared to metal cations or small neutral molecules, it is less common to find in the literature
examples where CDs are used to detect anions [142] probably because CDs surfaces are usually
negatively charged [143,144]. The few existent articles describe the indirect detection of negative ions
as PO34− , or S2− , or SCN− through the combination of CDs and a cation [116,117,145]. CD emission,
quenched by the cation, is recovered by the presence of anions which inhibits the quenching effect of the
cations. This strategy is sometimes used in the second type of nanosensors. In some works, the authors
proposed CD-based nanosensors where CDs are coupled to molecules [140,146] like rhodamine,
or to nanomaterials such as gold nanoparticles [145], or metal organic frameworks [141,147–149].
The sensing occurs both by emission quenching or emission enhancing as a result of the detachment,
for instance, of the nanoparticle from the surface of the dot induced by the presence of the analyte.
CDs are also used in, so-called, ratiometric sensors. Taking advantage of the simultaneous
presence of two emission bands peaked at different wavelengths (referred to as dual emission),
displayed by some CDs, one can use the variation of their intensity ratio as the physical observable to
infer the amount and the type of the analyte [150,151]. Indeed, in the same sample, different interactions
with the analyte can affect the chromophores responsible of the two bands. Therefore, the analyte can
quench them at different rates, causing a change of their intensity ratio.
2.3.4. Photocatalysis
A photocatalyst is a substance which, upon photo-excitation, becomes capable of speeding up
a chemical process. CDs have been proposed several times as active materials in photocatalytic
applications [156]. Their absorption and electron transfer properties, and the ease of coupling to
other materials as TiO2 [157], Fe2 O3 [158] or SiO2 [62] are particularly beneficial for these applications.
In general, CDs are employed in two different ways, as pictured in Figure 5 [157]. On one hand, they are
used as a photo-sensitizers: after absorption of light, CDs transfer a photo-generated electron to a
coupled semiconductor which otherwise would only absorb in the UV (Figure 5b). In this way,
the catalytic action of the composite is extended throughout the visible range. On the other hand,
they can be used as acceptor of charge carriers from the photoexcited semiconductor, in order to
slow down or suppress the recombination of electrons and holes (Figure 5a), thus increasing the
possibility of chemical reactions and enhancing photocatalytic properties.
Figure 5. Possible uses of CDs (yellow spheres) in a photocatalytic application: (a) as electron
acceptor (electron sink) from the semiconductor surface (blue block) increasing the photocatalytic
activity of the semiconductor; (b) as electron donor creating a cascade of electrons from CDs lowest
unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) to semiconductors. Reproduced with permission from [157].
Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, 2014.
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emission, involving band-to-band transitions, is often called intrinsic emission, many authors referring
to the states involved in these transitions as intrinsic states.
Considering now the more general case of CDs, characterized by a quasi-spherical shape and
graphitic structure, and taking into account their very small sizes, one can hypothesize that their
emission originates from a similar, quantum confinement effect. Thereby, the emissive chromophore
would be the nanometric-sized, conjugated sp2 -domain constituting (or contained in) the CD
core. Such an interpretation was endorsed by several works in the literature [62,166,169,171],
and qualitatively agrees with the fact that carbonaceous nanoparticles only become “carbon dots”, i.e.,
highly fluorescence, after they are reduced to very small sizes. Indeed, in some works, the authors
controlled the size of CDs during the synthesis [166,171] or after it by fractionation procedures
[62], and recorded an emission which displays a regular size-dependence. Typically, these works
reported that the smallest CDs display the bluest emission, as expected in a quantum confinement
regime. For instance, Li et al. [62] reported an optical study of four CD fractions sized from 1 nm to
4 nm, and found an emission which blueshifts with the reduction of the size (Figure 6). However,
several problems exist with this interpretation. If quantum confinement affects the whole graphitic core,
it should only apply to ultra-small sized CDs because the bandgap of π-domains with a diameter of
2 nm is already too small (1 eV) to emit visible light [172]. Furthermore, other works have demonstrated
for CDs a red-shift of the electronic transition energy with decreasing size, which is exactly opposite to
what would be expected from quantum confinement [89,173].
Figure 6. (a) solutions of CDs with different sizes under daylight (left) and UV light (right; 365 nm);
(b) emission spectra of different fractions: the red, black, green, and blue lines are the emission spectra
for blue-, green-, yellow-, and red-emitting CDs appearing in panel (a), respectively. (c) CDs size vs.
the emission peak; (d) Electronic gap dependence on the size of the graphite fragments, as obtained by
quantum chemical calculations. Reproduced with permission from [62]. Copyright John Wiley and
Sons, 2010.
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Therefore, it is widely believed that CD optical properties cannot be simply explained by the
transitions between intrinsic states. In contrast, the emission of many CDs seems overwhelmingly
influenced by extrinsic contributions mostly related to the surface: emission from surface defects,
surface charge traps [1,174], or surface molecular-like states [166]. Indeed, there is a lot of experimental
evidence that supports the idea of an emission which involves the surface. For instance, an appropriate
passivation procedure is crucial to obtain highly fluorescent CDs [56], and CD fluorescence strongly
depends on pH [31,175] and solvents [32,43]. More generally, the chemical characteristics of the
surface, as, for example, the degree of oxidation, seem to have a dramatic influence on the emission
quantum yield [176,177]. These surface treatments probably change the number of surface emissive
traps, their emission efficiency and stability, and the alignment of the energy levels with respect to the
energy gap, influencing the emission peak and the quantum yield.
The involvement of intrinsic and extrinsic states in the optical response of CDs are not mutually
exclusive, and the interaction between the two is a difficult problem. In fact, it seems very likely that
the nature of this interplay is highly structure- and synthesis-dependent.
On one hand, some authors simply proposed that the emissive surface states are completely
independent of the crystalline structure of the core [14]. However, it has been impossible to precisely
relate these chromophores to any specific functional group on CD surfaces. In fact, the situation
could be more complex: a recent study systematically compared the optical properties of CDs
with different surface functionalization, and provided evidence that the emissive states are highly
delocalized on the disordered surface shell, thus involving simultaneously a large number of functional
groups [23].
On the other hand, depending on the structure of the dots, various possible forms of interplay
between core and surface states have been proposed. Wang et al. [178] tried to disentangle the role of
the core and the surface investigating three samples with a different degree of crystallization of the
core and similar emission characteristics. By ultrafast spectroscopy (see Section 3.4 for more details),
they demonstrated that the excited-state behavior is the same in all the samples, but the quantum
yield depends on the degree of crystallization. In particular, according to their model, the core is
initially photoexcited and an exciton is created, which is later transferred to the surface and the charges
are separated on surface traps. Finally, recombination of the trapped charges produces the emission.
In another work on GQDs, Zhu et al. [166] compared the spectroscopic properties of four samples
with different sizes, finding that the intrinsic state depends on the size but the optical properties are
conditioned by the edge states because the emission depends on the alignment between the latter
and the intrinsic state. When a system is photoexcited, the intrinsic states are populated, and if the
edge states are intra-gap states, they are populated from the intrinsic states and therefore the emission
originates from the radiative recombination from the edge states to the ground state; on the contrary,
if the energy separation between the edge states and the ground states is higher than the band gap,
they are not involved in the emission, which comes from band-to-band recombination (Figure 7).
Broadly speaking, a widespread model used to describe CD optical properties is that of a
core-to-surface migration of the excitation. According to this idea, the core of CDs behaves as the
optical antenna responsible of initial photon absorption. Then, spontaneous charge separation occurs
and electron and holes are trapped on surface states. Finally, the fluorescence stems from a radiative
recombination of these charges, released from the surface traps. This interpretation of CD optical
transitions was born together with CDs [1], and later endorsed by many other authors [54,107,108,166,179],
but finding convincing experimental evidence of these ideas has been difficult.
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Figure 7. The electronic level structures of CDs of different sizes, as proposed in [166]. The intrinsic
state depends on size, hence the energy level offset with the edge state, which ultimately decides
the optical properties. Certain alignments between states also open a possibility for intersystem
crossing and subsequent long-lived triplet emission. The latter, however, is very difficult to observe
experimentally in most CDs. Reproduced with permission from [166]. Copyright Elsevier, 2014.
Another contrasting model recently proposed in the literature is based on the idea of an optical
charge transfer transition, in which a surface-localized exciton is directly formed at the time of photon
absorption [43]. In this model, supported by solvatochromic, time-resolved and single-molecule
fluorescence studies, an electron transfer from core states to surface traps already occurs at the
stage of photo-excitation, and the fluorescence is due to the inverse recombination transition.
The spectroscopical fingerprints of the CDs that adhere to this mechanism seem to be a well-defined
charge transfer band observed in the electronic absorption spectra, and a single-exponential
fluorescence decay [43], both in striking contrast with the broad, unstructured optical absorption
and multi-exponential decays observed for most CDs [39,180,181].
More recently, the emission of CDs produced by some specific (and very popular) bottom-up
methods has been the subject of a particularly lively debate. Several authors proposed that the blue
emission of these types of CDs is actually due to simple, small fluorescent organic molecules attached to
CD surfaces or bound to the π-conjugated core, rather than to the dot itself [182,183], while other
works attributed the emission of some types of dual-emitting dots to aggregates of several molecular
chromophores [19,184], and some even claimed a role of free molecules diffusing in solution [185].
Indeed, it has been established that some bottom-up syntheses of CDs can produce small fluorescent
molecular derivatives, formed alongside with the carbonization process, both if the synthesis is
carried out in water [183] or in an organic solvent [15]. In particular, the production of CDs from
the decomposition of citric acid and a N-containing precursor lead to the formation of 2-pyridone
derivatives [91,182], such as citrazinic acid [102,183,184], and the relative yield of the molecular
byproducts and CD cores changes in favour of the latter at higher synthesis temperatures [161,186,187].
There is a lot of evidence supporting these ideas, as the similarity of the blue emission of
cytrazinic acid at 420–440 nm to the blue fluorescence of many CDs obtained from citric acid [88,188],
theoretical simulations [103,183], and the lack of tunability of the emission band of these CDs,
in striking contrast with the behaviour of CD fluorescence excited at lower energies, which is strongly
tunable [161].
Unfortunately, the emission due to the molecular chromophores and the one associated with
the dot itself can be very hard to discriminate. Song et al. [161] produced a sample with a blue
optical activity independent of excitation wavelength and another emission band which is tunable.
They investigated these two activities and suggested that their origin is different: the tunable emission
is associated with electronic transitions which involve the core, while the non-tunable one is related to
the presence of small molecules in solution. In particular, these molecules are supposed to exist
in two forms: free in solution or attached to dot surfaces. Schneider et al. [88] found that the blue
emission of CDs peaking at 430 nm decays with a bi-exponential kinetics, leading to hypothesize the
C 2018, 4, 67 16 of 35
presence of two forms of the same chromophore: one attached to the dot, and the other free in solution.
Wang et al. [183] investigated the effect of UV-photobleaching on CDs. They combined experimental
studies on CDs and on citrazinic acid with theoretical simulations and proposed a model in which the
chromophore is a molecule of citrazinic acid attached to the surface of the dot.
Last but not least, another recently proposed model for the origin of CDs emission pictures the
dots as excitonic H-aggregates composed by molecular chromophores stacked on each other [189].
The result of this stacking is the splitting of the excited energy level of the single chromophore,
leading to the large Stokes shift typical of CDs. However, this mechanism guarantees exciton
delocalization over the entire particle which behaves as a single emissive dot, thus overcoming
the idea of a “molecular” chromophore localized on the CD surface.
Notwithstanding the several studies on the emission mechanisms of CDs, no unique model exists
yet to explain its origin. The debate is still open and, probably, it is complicated by the variability of
CDs, which not only affects CDs obtained by different synthesis procedures, but is also testified,
even more dramatically, by the heterogeneity exhibited by the majority of CD samples.
as a random fractionation down to the level of single dots, or aggregates of a few dots. These experiments
aim to answer to important questions, such as whether the tunability is still preserved at the single dot
level or, in contrast, every dot acts as a single non-tunable emitter, or if the fluorescence decay kinetics
observed in the overall CD ensemble is the same with respect to the single nanoparticle.
The very few existing experiments on single CDs revealed much information related to emission
and to tunability. Dispersing an extremely diluted solution on a substrate allows for collecting the
emission from individual dots (or small aggregates composed by few dots). Usually, single dots
display narrower emission spectra than the ensemble measurements (refs. [43,191] and Figure 8a)
pointing out the inhomogeneous width of ensemble emission bands, which are probably due to the
superposition of the emission of individual dots, the peaks of which strongly fluctuate from dot to dot.
Furthermore, Ghosh et al. [191] demonstrate the disappearance of the tunability at single dot level,
as in Figure 8b, which suggests that a single dot acts as a single quantum emitter, with its particular
energy gap. Therefore, spectral heterogeneity would only appear at an ensemble level due to the
superposition of the spectral characteristics of several CDs [189,191].
Figure 8. (a) (1): Ensemble emission spectrum excited at 488 nm; (2)–(5): emission spectra from
individual dots excited at 488 nm; (b) (1)–(5) emission spectra from individual dots excited at 467 nm
(red curves) and at 488 nm (black curves). Reproduced with permission from [191]. Copyright American
Chemical Society, 2014.
In the same work, the multi-exponential decay of emission is also not observed in single dots,
suggesting that also the multi-exponential decay is a fingerprint of heterogeneity, arising from
dot-to-dot differences in excited-state lifetimes [191].
However, these results were disputed by other works. In fact, other papers reported that the
tunability is observed even at the single dot level [6], showing that a single dot can emit different
colours if excited at variable energy, indicating the presence of independent emission sites within a
single CD, in striking contrast with the results of Ref. [191]. This evident contradiction between the
results may be related to different experimental conditions. In particular, because of their very small
sizes, it can be hard to discriminate between truly “single” dots and aggregates of a few dots. Therefore,
it is possible that claims of tunability at the single-dot level are actually due to the emission from small
C 2018, 4, 67 18 of 35
aggregates of CDs as sometimes observed in other systems [195] and, therefore, the tunability is just
related to the superposition of emission of different dots.
To address the origin of tunability, a second method consists in the selection of a part of the
as-synthesized original sample according to various criteria which span from surface charge [106,196]
to particle size [10,25,62,89,92]. Any of these separation methods is helpful to provide a more
homogeneous sample which is extracted from the original one. Indeed, these fractions usually
display simpler optical characteristics or narrower morphological distribution. In addition, in this case,
the results reported in the literature, and therefore their interpretations, are quite variable. By size
exclusion chromatography (SEC), Kang et al. [62] separated CD nanoparticles according to their size.
They found that the emission depends on the fraction, although each fraction displays a non-tunable
fluorescence. Following this, they claimed that the inhomogeneity and, therefore, the tunability,
is due to size polydispersity. For this reason, they supported the idea of a quantum confinement effect
which affects the origin of emission. On the contrary, Wen et al. [89], using the same fractionation
method, isolated several fractions with different size, and two of them in particular were considered
pure emitters (green and blue, respectively) (Figure 9). The smaller fraction emits green fluorescence
and the larger emits blue light, behaviour which is completely in disagreement with a quantum
confinement vision. Therefore, the authors associated the tunability of the as-prepared sample to a
different form of heterogeneity, i.e., dot-to-dot fluctuations of the density and type of surface functional
groups. Thus, rather than quantum confinement, these authors propose that differently-sized dots
display variable optical properties as a consequence of their different surface-to-volume ratio [89].
This interpretation was recently confirmed by a work where SEC was combined for the first time with
ultrafast spectroscopy to address the elusive origin of fluorescence tunability [173].
Another commonly used separation procedure is High Performance Liquid Chromatography
(HPLC) [25,92]. The success of the technique is evident from the very different optical properties of the
obtained fractions, although it is generally difficult to operate a selection based on a single structural
property (size, polarity...). In Ref. [25], the subsets show diverse emission bands and the single fractions
are non-tunable. According to this, the authors generically associated the origin of tunability to the
inhomogeneity of nanoparticle charge and/or size. Fuyuno et al. [92], using the same technique on
a sample of GQDs, accomplished the separation of the sample into fractions displaying different
optical properties. Despite this, they did not observe the disappearance of tunability and, therefore,
associated the latter with the presence of sp2 domains with different size and shape within each GQD.
Figure 9. Products from a size exclusion chromatography procedure, as observed under daylight
(top), or under UV light (bottom). Reproduced with permission from [89]. Copyright Royal Society of
Chemistry, 2016.
study based on the result of a solvatochromic investigation [180], where the authors found a very
slow solvation mechanism which causes a redshift of the fluorescence spectrum progressing on a time
scale comparable to that of fluorescence decay. This so-called red-edge effect violates Kasha’s rule and
therefore may explain fluorescence tunability because the relative population of different emissive
states becomes dependent on the excitation energy. However, such a hypothesis of very slow solvation
around the surface of CDs has been disputed by several later works, based on the direct observation of
solvation dynamics on sub-nanosecond time scales [102,132].
Figure 10. (a): emission spectra of CD solution with different amount of Hg2+ ions. (b,c): schematic
illustration of fluorescence and quenching mechanisms, respectively. Reproduced with permission
from [138]. Copyright Elsevier, 2012.
In general, the fluorescence of CDs usually responds to multiple metal cations, but some
works [202,203] have reported a selective quenching of CDs by specific ions, which is probably
C 2018, 4, 67 20 of 35
due to the specific binding interactions between certain CD surface groups with particular metals.
Another recurrent finding in the literature is the selectivity of quenching by a copper ion with
respect to zinc ion, which supports the idea of an electron transfer interaction. In fact, copper ions
have an open-shell electronic configuration ([Ar]3d9 ) which can host an electron donated from
the dot, while zinc ions have a full d-shell and they are not expected to easily accept additional
electrons [132,175].
In general, the ability of CDs to act as efficient photo-activated electron donors is rather
well-established and not limited to the interaction with transition metal ions. In addition, depending on
surface structure, CDs can also work as photo-excited electron acceptors. For instance, charge transfer
dynamics are observed between CDs and organic molecules [197], or various types of metal
complexes [204] or when CDs are adsorbed onto semiconductor surface [62]. This is the phenomenon
which allows for using CDs as photosensitizers of semiconductors in photocatalytic devices.
The physical and chemical mechanisms underneath the charge transfer are not clear, as for instance
the role of a specific surface structure in mediating the interaction between CD surfaces and a given ion.
In addition, the dynamics of these processes are quite fast (picosecond or less) and they are invisible
with standard spectroscopical methods, therefore ultrafast time-resolved techniques, still rare in the
field, are necessary to go deeply inside the mechanisms of these interactions, and are being increasingly
used in recent times. These studies are discussed in the next subsection.
When CDs are in contact with other electron donors (stronger than CDs), as in Refs. [197]
or [204], they can act as electron acceptor and their fluorescence is quenched because a photoinduced
electron transfer occurs from the external agent to the dots. The capability of CDs of behaving
more efficiently as electron donors or acceptors is not well understood, but is likely related to their
redox potential [132,205], which, in turn, depends on core and surface structures. To control this
behaviour, which can be useful in photocatalytic or optoelectronic devices, Barman et al. [206]
compared the behaviour of CDs subjected to n- or p-type doping. The electron transfer from the
dot is favoured in the case of n-type doping (obtained with phosphorous), whereas CDs behave as
electron acceptors (hole donors) when they are p-doped (by boron doping). Another way to control
these properties is tailoring the surface of CDs in such a way to control their redox potential. Rigodanza
and coworkers [205] did this with a reaction between CDs and different quinones, and demonstrated
the promising electron transfer properties of CDs in particular surface conditions.
Besides the interactions with metal ions or molecules in solution, also solvent and pH have a
crucial role in the properties of CDs. In particular, solvatochromic changes of the emission have
been reported by several works [31,43,180,207], and the solvent can influence the interaction between
photoexcited CDs and various external systems [197,202]. Moreover, changes in pH value influence
emission intensity [198], probably changing the charge state of surface groups [175], due to their
acidic/basic character. Similar to the electron transfer interactions, these observations also tend to
confirm the key role of surface states in the photo-cycle of CDs. Chandra et al. [175] demonstrate
that CDs synthesized from different precursors are stable in diverse pH intervals and, consequently,
the emission is maximum at different pHs. This is caused by the presence of various groups on
the surface as, for instance, –COOH and –NH2 , which have very different acid-base properties.
Another example is reported in Ref. [198] where a great amount of H+ ions in solution is found to
modify the emission. Here, the authors supposed that H+ ions can protonate pyridinic N atoms on the
surface of the dot, supposedly responsible for the emission. Then, when the system is photoexcited,
a proton transfer supposedly occurs from pyridinic N to the carbon structure which blocks the
emission process. Solvation usually modifies CDs emission both through non-specific and site-specific
interaction. In fact, depending on cases, CDs can be either sensitive to the polarity of the solvent,
or to its capacity to form a hydrogen bond, or to both. Because CD surfaces are rich in HB acceptors
such as carboxyilic groups, their capability to accept a hydrogen bond from a protic solvent can be
absolutely crucial in the stabilization of the excited state, hence in determining the emission peak
position [43,208,209]. Solvation studies with the use of steady state and time resolved nanosecond
C 2018, 4, 67 21 of 35
spectroscopy demonstrate these effects through the dependence of the emission band on the polarity of
the solvent [43,102,197,210], as well as a solvent-driven modulation of the non-radiative decay rates,
hence the quantum yield [43,211]. Femtosecond studies, still rare for CDs, are needed to directly
observe the undergoing solvation dynamics, which occurs on the picosecond and sub-picosecond
scale [132,207]. In some cases, CDs display a very complex and irregular solvent response [32,102],
which was attributed it to the coexistence of hydrophobic and hydrophilic groups on their surface
(Figure 11). However, depending on their surface structures, CDs can also display a surprisingly
simple solvent response, which can be used as a sensitive probe of the local polarity of the surrounding
environment, though a regular dependence of the emission peak from the Dimroth–Reichardt ETN
solvent polarity parameter [43].
Figure 11. Emission spectra of CDs in different solvents excited at 290 nm (A) and 400 nm (B). Reproduced with
permission from [32]. Copyright American Chemical Society, 2013.
these short-lived transitions, therefore to disentangle the role of band-to-band from edge transitions.
In this case, the two types of emissions seem to proceed independently from each other, without any
crosstalk between core and edge states. In addition, the population of the excited state appears to be
instantaneous upon photo-excitation.
Opposite results were found by other works, where various forms of excitation transfer from
core to surface were proposed [54,107,108,166,178,179]. For example, Strauss et al. [179] found
that the population of the excited state occurs in tens of picoseconds from initial photo-excitation,
probably through an energy transfer from the core. Other works, however, proposed these dynamics to
be much faster, being completed within 400 fs [54]. The TA experiment presented by Lu et al. [107,108]
discussed in more detail the interplay between core and surface. In fact, they disentangled two parallel
relaxation channels which contribute to the population, from the photoexcited carbon core, of two
different types of surface states: one which recombines in a non-radiative way and another one which
is strongly emissive and detectable in steady-state experiments. Thereby, these results directly suggest
the existence of an interplay between the carbon core and the surface states which contribute to the
emission. By FLUC experiments, Wen et al. [215] conducted a study of the dynamics of charge carriers
in photo-excited CDs, trying to compare them to the well-known dynamics within photoexcited
semiconductor nanoparticles [162]. In their study, they identified time scales related to optical phonon
scattering (<5 ps), acoustic phonon scattering (50 ps) and exciton recombination (1.5 ns). Moreover,
they identified a fast component of 400 fs which is attributed to surface trapping of electrons from the
core into surface states.
As already mentioned, solvation dynamics at the surface of CDs is expected to occur on
sub-nanosecond time scales, as usually observed in molecular dyes. Therefore, femtosecond methods
are mandatory to study these relaxation effects. Studies of CD solvation are still very rare.
Jing et al. [207], recently observed solvation relaxation for CDs in different solvents, and attributed
these dynamics to dipole–dipole interaction between CDs and solvent molecules.
Besides the intrinsic photocycle, ultrafast methods have also been used to address the fundamental
mechanisms of charge transfer from or to CDs—for example when they are coupled to other materials
as graphene oxide [216] or metal complexes [204]. As mentioned in Section 3.3, the emission of CDs
is commonly quenched by interaction with a variety of external agents. This effect is tentatively
associated with electron transfer from the dot to the coupled system or the other way around. Very few
works used femtosecond methods to address the problem of electron transfer dynamics from/to CDs
to/from various coupled systems. For instance, in Ref. [216], the authors studied CD–graphene oxide
(GO) nanocomposites and found a time constant of 400 fs for the electron transfer from CDs to GO.
Another work [204] dealt with the interactions between CDs and iridium-ruthenium metal complexes,
from which the authors identified two time constants of ≈1 ps and ≈20 ps associated with charge
transfer from the metal complex to the CDs excited state. A recent study addressed for the first time by
femtosecond methods the interaction dynamics between CD and copper ions, an archetipal oxidant
for CDs, and directly observed the dynamics of the electron transfer reactions, occurring on two time
scales of 0.2 ps and 2.0 ps [132]. Interestingly, it was found that these reactions are driven by the local
rearrangment of the solvent around the anchoring site of the ion on the CD surface, suggesting again a
key role of the solvent in determining the photophysics of these systems.
Combining CDs with other materials in solar cells or photocatalytic devices changes the
efficiency of the device, increasing or decreasing it. Some authors used femtosecond spectroscopy to
investigate the optical response of these devices [109,155,213], or of the component materials used
in them [216–219]. It is worth reporting here the comparison between two extreme situations.
Tetsuka et al. [213] used a sample of nitrogen-functionalized GQDs as a layer within a perovskite solar
cell. Using femtosecond TA, they established the speed up in the electron extraction rate from ≈300 ps
to ≈50 ps caused by the addition of GQDs, as a consequence of which GQDs lead to an increase of the
power conversion efficiency. On the other extreme, Margraf et al. [155] demonstrated that the use of
C 2018, 4, 67 23 of 35
CDs as sensitizers in mesoscopic solar cells reduces the performance of the solar cells and attributed
this to the non-ideal balance between the charge recombination and the regeneration processes.
Last but not least, femtosecond methods are not only useful to study the fundamental
photo-cycle of CDs, but also to address the relation between disorder and fluorescence tunability,
providing a complementary approach with respect to single-molecule and fractionation experiments
discussed in Section 3.2. Recently, femtosecond hole burning experiments [173], allowed for breaking
into the structureless electronic absorption spectra of CDs and reveal the true, underlying homogeneous
absorption lineshapes. Combined with SEC, these experiments allowed for explaining CD fluorescence
tunability as a photo-selection effect across a family of transitions with continuously variable energies
(Figure 12). This dot-to-dot spectroscopic variability was attributed to the fluctuating surface
structures of the ultra-small dots, ruling out again any role of quantum confinement in the emission
mechanism of these CDs.
Figure 12. (top): femtosecond TA data excited at different wavelengths. (bottom left): data recorded at
50 ps from photo-excitation, showing the hole burning within the optical absorption band, and
the photoselection across a family of transition with continuously variable energies. (middle right):
decomposition of the TA data in contributions due to ground state bleaching (GSB), excited-state
absorption (ESA) and stimulated emission (SE). The SE is compared with the steady-state fluorescence
signal. (bottom right): comparison between steady-state optical absorption (OA) and individual
homogeneous contributions obtained from hole burning data. Reproduced with permission from [173].
Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, 2018.
C 2018, 4, 67 24 of 35
4. Conclusions
After more than a decade of intense debate, the problem of understanding the fundamental
photophysics of CDs is still open, made particularly difficult by the large variability of CD structures.
The existing data overall indicate that CD optical responses cannot be described within a simple
and unified paradigm. In fact, the wide structural variability of CDs synthesized through different
routes entails a range of different electronic properties and variable behaviours upon photo-excitations.
However, one should keep in mind that the remarkable diversity of CDs synthesized by different
routes remains one of their key strengths in tailoring them for multiple applications.
The “classical” interpretations of CD fluorescence invoke a combination of transitions involving
molecular-like surface states, states related to surface passivating groups, and conjugated sp2 domains
within the carbogenic core. Today, it should be recognized that these different mechanisms are
probably all possible, although the unique interplay betwen electronic states of different nature is
structure-dependent and uniquely determined for each sub-type of CD.
Anyway, recent works have achieved important steps forward in our current understanding of
these nanosystems, by deploying a range of advanced methods from single-molecule microscopy to
femtosecond time-resolved spectroscopy. For instance, it has been conclusively clarified that the
characteristic fluorescence “tunability” of CDs is an effect of disorder, mostly due to dot-to-dot
fluctuations of the surface structure. Furthermore, the crucial role of surface trap states, populated by
spontaneous charge separation after photo-excitation, is now well-established in the literature. Indeed,
recent work has provided direct evidence, in several significant cases, of the very fundamental
dynamics that bring CDs from the initially excited state to the final outcome of the photocycle,
either fluorescence or a relevant photochemical process.
Despite these advances, plenty of work remains to be done. In particular, the ability to reliably
foresee how a given CD structure will yield a specific photo-physical behaviour is still beyond our reach.
Such a limitation, combined with the enduring difficulty of synthesizing CDs with precisely controlled
structures, still hinders their full control and optimization in a number of applications. Thus, the main
challenge to be overcome in the field remains, achieving a comprehensive understanding of how the
optical response of CDs can be traced back to specific, and tightly controlled, microcopic structures.
Only by fulfilling this task will it be possible to achieve the complete control of CDs and fully exploit
their large technological potential.
Author Contributions: Writing—Original Draft Preparation, A.S.; Writing—Review & Editing, A.S., A.C., F.M.;
Supervision, A.C., F.M.
Funding: This research received no external funding.
Acknowledgments: The authors wish to thank all members of the Laboratory “R. Boscaino” of Advanced
Materials—University of Palermo, Italy, and of the Ultrafast Molecular Spectroscopy Lab—University of Bern
(Switzerland), for support and stimulating discussions. A.C. thanks the Swiss SNSF through the NCCR MUST
and SNSF project n. 200021_172696.
Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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