Binding Affinities and Thermodynamics of Noncovalent
Functionalization of Carbon
Nanotubes with Surfactants
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Abstract
Binding affinity and thermodynamic
understanding between a surfactant
and carbon nanotube is essential to develop various carbon nanotube
applications. Flavin mononucleotide-wrapped carbon nanotubes showing
a large redshift in optical signature were utilized to determine the
binding affinity and related thermodynamic parameters of 12 different
nanotube chiralities upon exchange with other surfactants. Determined
from the midpoint of sigmoidal transition, the equilibrium constant
(<i>K</i>), which is inversely proportional to the binding
affinity of the initial surfactant-carbon nanotube, provided quantitative
binding strengths of surfactants as SDBS > SC β FMN >
SDS,
irrespective of electronic types of SWNTs. Binding affinity of metallic
tubes is weaker than that of semiconducting tubes. The complex <i>K</i> patterns from semiconducting tubes show preference to
certain SWNT chiralities and surfactant-specific cooperativity according
to nanotube chirality. Controlling temperature was effective to modulate <i>K</i> values by 30% and enables us to probe thermodynamic parameters.
Equally signed enthalpy and entropy changes produce Gibbs energy changes
with a magnitude of a few kJ/mol. A greater negative Gibbs energy
upon exchange of surfactant produces an enhanced nanotube photoluminescence,
implying the importance of understanding thermodynamics for designing
nanotube separation and supramolecular assembly of surfactant