4.8 Article

Graphene Oxides in Water: Correlating Morphology and Surface Chemistry with Aggregation Behavior

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 13, Pages 6964-6973

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b00810

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [CPC1402WA009]
  2. National Science Foundation's CAREER Award [CBET 1454656]
  3. McDonnell Academy Global Energy and Environment Partnership (MAGEEP), Washington University in St. Louis
  4. National Science Foundation [ECS-0335765, CBET-1337374]
  5. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  6. Directorate For Engineering [1454656] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Aqueous aggregation processes can significantly impact function, effective toxicity, environmental transport, and ultimate fate of advanced nanoscale materials, including graphene and graphene oxide (GO). In this work, we have synthesized flat graphene oxide (GO) and five physically crumpled GOs (CGO, with different degrees of thermal reduction, and thus oxygen functionality) using an aerosol method, and characterized the evolution of surface chemistry and morphology using a suite of spectroscopic (UV-vis, FTIR, XPS) and microscopic (AFM, SEM, and TEM) techniques. For each of these materials, critical coagulation concentrations (CCC) were determined for NaCl, CaCl2, and MgCl2 electrolytes. The CCCs were correlated with material zeta-potentials (R-2 = 0.94-0.99), which were observed to be mathematically consistent with classic DLVO theory. We further correlated CCC values with CGO chemical properties including C/O ratios, carboxyl group concentrations, and C-C fractions. For all cases, edge-based carboxyl functional groups are highly correlated to observed CCC values (R-2 = 0.89-0.95). Observations support the deprotonation of carboxyl groups with low acid dissociation constants (pk(a)) as the main contributors to zeta-potentials and thus material aqueous stability. We also observe CCC values to significantly increase (by 18-80%) when GO is physically crumpled as CGO. Taken together, the findings from both physical and chemical analyses clearly indicate that both GO shape and surface functionality are critical to consider with regard to understanding fundamental material behavior in water.

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