4.8 Article

Selective Surface Charge Sign Reversal on Metallic Carbon Nanotubes for Facile Ultrahigh Purity Nanotube Sorting

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 3222-3232

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b05795

Keywords

carbon nanotubes; sorting purification; gel chromatography; charge sign reversal

Funding

  1. Singapore National Research Foundation [NRF-CRP2-2007-02]
  2. Singapore Ministry of Education [MOE2013-T3-1-002]
  3. Singapore NMRC Ministry of Health Industry [NMRC/MOHIAFCAT2/003/2014, MOHIAF-CAT2005]
  4. Nanyang Technological University

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Semiconducting (semi-) single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) must be purified of their metallic (met-) counterparts for most applications including nano electronics, solar cells, chemical sensors, and artificial skins. Previous bulk sorting techniques are based on subtle contrasts between properties of different nanotube/dispersing agent complexes. We report here a method which directly exploits the nanotube band structure differences. For the heterogeneous redox reaction of SWNTs with oxygen/water couple, the aqueous pH can be tuned so that the redox kinetics is determined by the availability of nanotube electrons only at/near the Fermi level, as predicted quantitatively by the Marcus-Gerischer (MG) theory. Consequently, met-SWNTs oxidize much faster than semi-SWNTs and only met-SWNTs selectively reverse the sign of their measured surface zeta potential from negative to positive at the optimized acidic pH when suspended with nonionic surfactants. By passing the redox-reacted nanotubes through anionic hydrogel beads, we isolate semi-SWNTs to record high electrically verified purity above 99.94% +/- 0.04%. This facile charge sign reversal (CSR)-based sorting technique is robust and can sort SWNTs with a broad diameter range.

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