Aqueous, Mixed Micelles as a Means of Delivering the
Hydrophobic Ionic Liquid EMIM TFSI to Graphene Oxide Surfaces
Posted on 2022-01-02 - 18:43
Most
ionic liquids (ILs) are not surface-active and cannot, alone,
be directed to assemble at surfacesdespite their potential
as nonvolatile structure-directing agents and use as advanced materials
in a multitude of applications. In this work, we investigate aqueous
systems of common nonionic surfactants (Triton X-100 and Tween 20),
which we use to solubilize 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide.
The resulting solution of mixed micelle leads to spontaneous adsorption
of the IL/surfactant complex onto graphene oxide (GO) surfaces, forming
a compact film. Adsorption isotherms generated by fluorescence labeling
of the IL and surfactant phases are used to quantify the extent of
adsorption. While sensitive to the GO dispersion concentration, upwards
of 3 g IL/g GO adsorb under dilute conditions. Atomic force microscopy
is used to show that the adsorbed layer uniformly distributes as an
∼1 nm thick coating (per GO side) as the system reaches the
first plateau of a Langmuir-type isotherm. Adsorption beyond this
plateau is possible but leads to thicker (>30 nm), inhomogeneous
adsorbed
layers. Both micellar size in solution and adsorbed layer thickness
reduce upon the addition of IL to the surfactant phase, suggesting
significant interactions among the materials and nonideal mixing of
the components.
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Lashkari, Sima; Chekini, Mahshid; Pal, Rajinder; Pope, Michael A. (2022). Aqueous, Mixed Micelles as a Means of Delivering the
Hydrophobic Ionic Liquid EMIM TFSI to Graphene Oxide Surfaces. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c02928