The role of the bile salt surfactant sodium deoxycholate in aqueous two-phase separation of single-wall carbon nanotubes revealed by systematic parameter variations
Joeri Defillet, Marina Avramenko, Miles Martinati, Miguel, \'Angel L\'opez Carillo, Domien Van der Elst, Wim Wenseleers, Sofie, Cambr\'e

TL;DR
This study systematically investigates how sodium deoxycholate influences the separation of single-wall carbon nanotubes in aqueous two-phase extraction, revealing diameter-dependent surfactant stacking as a key mechanism for sorting.
Contribution
It provides a detailed understanding of the surfactant's role in SWCNT separation, enabling optimized two-step sorting of specific chiral structures.
Findings
Diameter-dependent stacking of sodium deoxycholate determines separation order.
Cosurfactants can improve yields without changing sorting order.
Predictive parameters for targeted chiral separation are established.
Abstract
Aqueous two-phase (ATP) extraction has been demonstrated as a fast, scalable, and effective separation technique to sort single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) according to their diameter and chiral structure. The exact mechanism behind the chirality-dependent migration of SWCNTs between the two phases is however not completely understood, and depends on many parameters (e.g., choice of surfactants and their concentration, pH, temperature, ...), making it difficult to optimize the multivariable parameter space. In this work, we present a systematic study of the choice and concentration of specific surfactants on the ATP sorting, by performing a series of single-step ATP separations in which each time only one parameter is systematically varied, while monitoring the structure-specific migration of every SWCNT chirality between both phases with detailed wavelength-dependent spectroscopy.…
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