4.6 Article

Wetting of CVD carbon films by polar and nonpolar liquids and implications for carbon nanopipes

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 1789-1794

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la0518288

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The handling, dispersion, manipulation, and functionalization of carbon nanotubes and nanopipes often require the use of solvents. Therefore, a good understanding of the wetting properties of the carbon nanotubes is needed. Such knowledge is also essential for the design of nanotube-based nanofluidic devices, which hold the promise of revolutionizing chemical analysis, separation, drug delivery, filtration, and sensing. In this work, we investigated the wetting behavior of individual nanopipes produced by the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of carbon in porous alumina templates and of thin carbon films produced by the same technique. The carbon pipes and films have the same chemistry and structure as determined by Raman and infrared spectroscopies and, when similarly treated, demonstrate the same qualitative wetting behavior, as determined by optical microscopy. Thus, measurements conducted on the carbon film surface are relevant to the nanopipes. In the case of the nanopipes, filling with various liquids was monitored. Contact angle experiments with both polar (water, glycerol, ethylene glycol, ethanol, tetra-hydro furan, and 2-propanol alcohol) and nonpolar liquids (cyclohexane, hexadecane, poly(dimethylsiloxane), and a fluoro-silicone) were conducted on films using the sessile drop method. The contact angles oil the CVD carbon films ranged from 0 to 79 degrees. The exposure of the carbon films to a NaOH solution, typically used to dissolve the alumina template, led to a significant decrease of the contact angle, especially in the case of polar liquids.

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