Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session V00: Poster Session III (1pm-4pm CST)
1:00 PM,
Thursday, March 7, 2024
Room: Hall BC
Abstract: V00.00102 : Emulsifying properties of pristine low-dimensional carbon forms
Presenter:
Karolina Z Milowska
(CIC Nanogune)
Authors:
Anna W Kuziel
(Silesian University of Technology)
Karolina Z Milowska
(CIC Nanogune)
P.-L. Chau
(Pasteur Insitute)
Emil Korczeniewski
(Nicolaus Copernicus University)
Aleksandra Cyganiuk
(Nicolaus Copernicus University)
Artur P Terzyk
(Nicolaus Copernicus University)
Krzysztof Koziol
(Cranfield University)
Mike C Payne
(University of Cambridge)
Slawomir Boncel
(Silesian University of Technology)
Due to their extraordinary properties, low dimensional carbon forms hold great promise for applications ranging from optoelectronic, through environmental to biomedical technologies. However, the conflicting reports about their natures hinder potential applications. For many potential large scale processing routes to efficiently manufacture and commercialize graphene based devices, composites, coatings, membranes or inks it is essential to understand the fundamental colloidal properties of pristine graphene flakes (GF). Similarly, carbon nanotubes (CNTs) which have already demonstrated scientific and technological breakthroughs including scalable coatings, composites, tissue engineering, and biosensors, hold enormous, yet unfulfilled, potential in other macro-scale applications.
Our studies into colloidal properties of pristine GF and short and thin pristine CNT revealed why and how they can be used as emulsion stabilizers without using any additional surfactants. The rigorous theoretical and experimental studies explained the physico-chemical mechanism governing their amphiphatic nature. Pristine GF with the small surface areas and short thin pristine CNTs, due to high hydrophilic-to-hydrophobic surface regions ratio, exhibit sufficiently good emulsifying properties to form stable water-in-oil emulsions. Recently, we found out that also fullerenes can stabilize emulsions. I will compare the emulsifying properties of low dimensional carbon forms and explain how their amphipathic strength can be controlled.
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