4.7 Article

Surfactive stabilization of multi-walled carbon nanotube dispersions with dissolved humic substances

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 157, Issue 4, Pages 1081-1087

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2008.09.039

Keywords

Carbon nanotubes; Surfactants; Humic substances

Funding

  1. US Army Engineer Research and Development Center
  2. US Army Corps of Engineers
  3. Charlotte Hayes, SpecPro, Inc.

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Soil humic substances (HS) stabilize carbon nanotube (CNT) dispersions, a mechanism we hypothesized arose from the surfactive nature of HS. Experiments dispersing multi-walled CNT in solutions of dissolved Aldrich humic acid (HA) or water-extractable Catlin soil HS demonstrated enhanced stability at 150 and 300 mg L-1 added Aldrich HA and Catlin HS, respectively, corresponding with decreased CNT mean particle diameter (MPD) and polydispersivity (PD) of 250 nm and 0.3 for Aldrich HA and 450 nm and 0.35 for Catlin HS. Analogous trends in MPD and PD were observed with addition of the surfactants Brij 35, Triton X-405, and SDS, corresponding to surfactant sorption maximum. NEWS characterization showed that Aldrich HA contained highly surfactive domains while Catlin soil possessed a mostly carbohydrate-based structure. This work demonstrates that the chemical structure of humic materials in natural waters is directly linked to their surfactive ability to disperse CNT released into the environment Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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