Abstract
The distribution of nanoparticles in different aqueous environments is a fundamental problem underlying a number of processes, ranging from biomedical applications of nanoparticles to their effects on the environment, health, and safety. Here, we study distribution of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in two immiscible aqueous phases formed by the addition of polyethylene glycol (PEG) and dextran. This well-defined model system exhibits a strikingly robust phenomenon: CNTs spontaneously partition between the PEG- and the dextran-rich phases according to nanotube's diameter and metallicity. Thermodynamic analysis suggests that this chirality-dependent partition is determined by nanotube's intrinsic hydrophobicity and reveals two distinct regimes in hydrophobicity-chirality relation: a small diameter (<1 nm) regime, where curvature effect makes larger diameter tubes more hydrophobic than small diameter ones, and a large diameter (>1.2 nm) regime, where nanotube's polarizability renders semiconducting tubes more hydrophobic than metallic ones. These findings reveal a general rule governing CNT behaviors in aqueous phase and provide an extremely simple way to achieve spatial separation of CNTs by their electronic structures.
Published Version
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