posted on 2014-03-06, 00:00authored byYoko Matsuzawa, Yuko Takada, Tetsuya Kodaira, Hideyuki Kihara, Hiromichi Kataura, Masaru Yoshida
A purification
method for raw single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) without damage
to their intrinsic structures has been desired in many applications.
We investigated the purification of SWCNTs based on high-speed centrifugation
of water-dispersed SWCNTs using the photoreactive dispersant we previously
investigated. SWCNTs wrapped with the dispersant were separated from
impurities, such as an amorphous carbon and metal particles by centrifugation,
similarly to conventional physical purification using surfactants.
In contrast to general surfactants that form micelles to disperse
SWCNTs in aqueous solutions, the photoreactive dispersant did not
form micelles. Therefore, an excess amount of the dispersant, which
did not adsorb onto the SWCNT surfaces, was removable by dialysis
of the supernatant. Since the amount of the dispersant was minimized
by dialysis, we tuned the UV-irradiation time to eliminate the dispersibility
of SWCNTs in water to as low a value as ∼2 h. The SWCNT precipitates
were collected, and their chemical and structural purity were evaluated
using thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), scanning electron microscopy
(SEM), and resonance Raman spectroscopy. It was found that present
methods combining high-speed centrifugation and photoreactive dispersant
provided an effective procedure to purify SWCNTs without any apparent
changes to their intrinsic properties.