1 research outputs found
Improved Characterization of Aqueous Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Dispersions Using Dynamic Light Scattering and Analytical Centrifuge Methods
Aqueous dispersions of single-walled carbon nanotubes
(SWCNTs)
with a surfactant were studied by using a combination of differential
sedimentation and dynamic light scattering methods. When applied to
elongated particles like SWCNTs, the differential sedimentation method
makes it possible to measure their diameters in dispersions, while
the dynamic light scattering method allows to measure their lengths.
Both methods have logarithmic dependence on the ratio between the
length and diameter of the particles, and their simultaneous use improves
the accuracy of measuring particles’ dimensions. It was shown
that sonication of dispersions leads not only to unbundling of agglomerates
into individual nanotubes but also to a decrease in their lengths
and the appearance of new defects detectable in increasing the D/G
ratio in the Raman spectra. Unbundling into individual nanotubes occurs
after exposure to 1 kWh/L energy density, and the single nanotube
diameter with SDBS is ca. 3.3 nm larger than that of the naked nanotubes.
Conductivity of thin SWCNT films made out of individual nanotubes
demonstrates a power law dependence with the exponent close to the
theoretical one for rigid rods
