Ultrasonication-Induced Extraction of Inner Shells from Double-Wall Carbon Nanotubes Characterized via In Situ Spectroscopy after Density Gradient Ultracentrifugation
Maksiem Erkens, Sofie Cambr\'e, Emmanuel Flahaut, Fr\'ed\'eric, Fossard, Annick Loiseau, Wim Wenseleers

TL;DR
This study reveals that even mild ultrasonication rapidly extracts inner single-wall CNTs from double-wall CNTs, significantly affecting their spectroscopic properties and complicating further analysis.
Contribution
It demonstrates the quick extraction of SWCNTs from DWCNTs via ultrasonication and provides in situ spectroscopic evidence of this process.
Findings
Ultrasonication causes rapid extraction of SWCNTs from DWCNTs.
In situ spectroscopy tracks the extraction process in real-time.
High-resolution microscopy confirms increased SWCNTs after ultrasonication.
Abstract
Even though ultrasonication is considered to be an effective method to disperse carbon nanotubes (CNTs), its devastating effects on the nanotubes are often neglected. Here, even mild ultrasonication is found to rapidly extract the inner single-wall CNTs (SWCNTs) from the outer shells of the double-wall CNTs (DWCNTs). As-synthesized DWCNTs are gently solubilized in a surfactant solution, strictly avoiding any ultrasonication, followed by two consecutive density gradient ultracentrifugation (DGU) steps to obtain a purified colloidal solution of isolated DWCNTs. The latter is carefully selected based on in situ resonant Raman (RRS) and fluorescence (PL) spectroscopy, measured as a function of depth directly in the ultracentrifuge tube after DGU. These purified DWCNTs are ultrasonicated in successive time steps while intermittently probing the sample via RRS and PL spectroscopy. These…
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