Efficient PET-RAFT polymerization achieved by using low-toxicity shortwave infrared CuInSeâ‚‚/CuInSâ‚‚ quantum dots

Sadie Harley
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

Photoinduced electron/energy transfer reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer (PET-RAFT) polymerization enables precise light-controlled polymer growth. Traditional near-infrared strategies often rely on nonlinear optical processes such as two-photon absorption or photon upconversion, which typically require high-intensity laser excitation.
Direct shortwave infrared (SWIR) light-driven PET-RAFT has distinct advantages such as higher selectivity, deeper tissue penetration, and potential applications in three-dimensional printing and transdermal polymerization. However, efficient photocatalysts that can directly utilize SWIR photons remain rare.
In a study published in the , a team led by Prof. Wu Kaifeng and Prof. Du Jun from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with Prof. Cyrille Boyer from the University of New South Wales, achieved living radical polymerization using low-toxicity copper indium selenide (CuInSe2) quantum dots (QDs), extending PET-RAFT excitation into the SWIR region at 1,050 nm.
Researchers synthesized highly luminescent CuInSe2/CuInS2 QDs with an absorption onset extended to 1,100 nm, and hybridized them with 4-Cyano-4-(dodecylsulfanylthiocarbonyl)sulfanylpentanoic acid as a photocatalyst. Under 1,050 nm excitation, this hybrid system effectively triggered PET-RAFT polymerization, achieving efficient polymerization through 3 mm of biological tissue.
Furthermore, researchers revealed that long-lived shallow defect-state electrons in CuInSe2 QDs played a key role during organic photochemical reactions, providing guidance for the development of high-performance SWIR photocatalysts.
"With further optimization of QDs, this strategy could enable efficient polymerization at even longer wavelengths, paving the way for SWIR-driven synthesis of advanced functional polymer materials," said Prof. Du.
More information: Yongshun Lyu et al, Efficient Photoinduced Living Polymerization Driven by Shortwave Infrared CuInSe2/CuInS2 Quantum Dots, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025).
Journal information: Journal of the American Chemical Society
Provided by Chinese Academy of Sciences