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The Origin of Amphipathic Nature of Short and Thin Pristine Carbon NanotubesâFully Recyclable 1D Water-in-Oil Emulsion Stabilizers
Short and thin pristine carbon nanotubes (CNTs) emerge as 1D emulsion stabilizers capable of replacing aquatoxic lowâmolecular surfactants. However, inconsistencies in understanding of waterâsolid interfaces for realistic CNTs hamper their individualizationâdriven functionalities, processability in benign media, and compatibility with a broadâscale of matrices. Pristine CNT processing based on water and inexpensive nâalkanes within a low energy regime would constitute an important step toward greener technologies. Therefore, structural CNT components are quantitatively assessed, placing various CNTs on the scale from hydrophobicity to hydrophilicity. This structural interweave can lead to amphipathicity enabling the formation of waterâinâoil emulsions. Combining experiments with theoretical studies, CNTs and CNT emulsions are comprehensively characterized establishing descriptors of the emulsifying behavior of pristine and purified CNTs. They emerge as having hydrophilic openâends, small number of oxygenâfunctionalized/vacancy surface areas, and hydrophobic sidewalls and full caps. The interplay of these regions allows short and thin CNTs to be utilized as fully recyclable 1D surfactants stabilizing water/oil emulsions which, as demonstrated, can be applied as paints for flexible conductive coatings. It is also shown how the amphipathic strength depends on CNT size, the pristineâtoâoxidized/vacancy domains and the oilâtoâwater ratios