Abstract

A significant advance in rate and precision of identifying the co-surfactant concentrations leading to differential extraction of specific single-wall carbon nanotube (SWCNT) species in aqueous two-polymer phase extraction experiments is reported. These gains are achieved through continuous titration of co-surfactant and other solution components during automated fluorescence measurements on SWCNT dispersions. The resulting fluorescence versus concentration curves display intensity and wavelength shift transitions traceable to the nature of the adsorbed surfactant layer on specific SWCNT structures at the (n,m) species and enantiomer level at high resolution. The increased precision and speed of the titration method resolve previously invisible complexity in the SWCNT fluorescence during the transition from one surfactant dominating the SWCNT interface to the other, offering insight into the fine details of the competitive exchange process. For the first time, we additionally demonstrate that the competitive process of the surfactant switch is direction independent (reversible) and hysteresis-free; the latter data effectively specifies an upper bound for the time scale of the exchange process. Titration curves are compared to literature results and initial advanced parameter variation is conducted for previously unreasonable to investigate solution conditions.

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