4.8 Article

Iron Oxide Nanoparticles Grafted with Sulfonated Copolymers are Stable in Concentrated Brine at Elevated Temperatures and Weakly Adsorb on Silica

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 5, Issue 8, Pages 3329-3339

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am4003974

Keywords

poly(2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonate-co-acrylic acid); superparamagnetic nanoparticles; steric stabilization; high salinity; multipoint grafting; magnetite nanoparticles; electromagnetic imaging

Funding

  1. Advanced Energy Consortium
  2. NSF [CBET-0968038]
  3. Welch Foundation [F-1621, F-1319]
  4. Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative

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Magnetic nanoparticles that can be transported in subsurface reservoirs at high salinities and temperatures are expected to have a major impact on enhanced oil recovery, carbon dioxide sequestration, and electromagnetic imaging. Herein we report a rare example of steric stabilization of iron oxide (10) nanoparticles (NPs) grafted with poly(2-acrylamido-2-methylpropanesulfonate-co-acrylic acid) (poly-(AMPS-co-AM) that not only display colloidal stability in standard American Petroleum Institute (API) brine (8% NaCI + 2% CaCl2 by weight) at 90 C for 1 month but also resist undesirable adsorption on silica surfaces (0.4% monolayer NPs). Because the AMPS groups interacted weakly with Ca2+, they were sufficiently well solvated to provide steric stabilization. The PAA groups, in contrast, enabled covalent grafting of the poly(AMPS-co-AA) chains to amine-functionalized 10 NPs via formation of amide bonds and prevented polymer desorption even after a 40000-fold dilution. The aforementioned methodology may be readily adapted to stabilize a variety of other functional inorganic and organic NPs at high salinities and temperatures.

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