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Carbon nano-onions: Individualization and enhanced water dispersibility

  • Matteo Andrea Lucherelli (Corresponding author)
  • , Lisa M.S. Stiegler
  • , Florian Steiger
  • , E. Harriet Åhlgren
  • , Julia Requena-Ramírez
  • , Edison Castro
  • , Luis Echegoyen
  • , Andreas Hirsch
  • , Wolfgang Peukert
  • , Jani Kotakoski
  • , Johannes Walter
  • , M. Eugenia Pérez-Ojeda (Corresponding author)
  • , Gonzalo Abellán (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Carbon nano-onions (CNOs) are a unique class of carbon nanomaterials, with a concentric fullerene-like structure and sp2-hybridized carbon atoms. Onions present high mechanical strength, good conductivity, the capability to intercalate alkali metals, showing promising applications in diverse fields, such as tribology, energy storage, and nanomedicine. Their production has been developed by several techniques, with the most interesting being the thermal annealing of carbon nanodiamonds because of the easy scalability (gram-scale) and morphologic control (size and shape form perfectly spherical to polygonal). However, this synthesis is commonly affected by the formation of strong aggregates larger than 100 nm, attributed to carbon soot formation or strong van der Waals interactions, hindering the work with small and individual particles, leading to an altered yield of functionalization. In this study we propose a method for CNO individualization based on strong acid treatment, yielding highly water dispersible nanoparticles. Analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC) analysis is employed as a technique to investigate the particle dimensions directly in dispersion, permitting an ensemble analysis free from further sample preparation bias. Moreover, we also provide a comprehensive evaluation of the common post-synthetic treatment methods, and their effects. By means of scanning transmission electron microscopy with medium angle annular dark field detector and electron energy loss spectroscopy (STEM-MAADF and EELS) we have shown images of individual CNOs. Their successful separation achieved in this study is significant for future research and applications in nanomedicine, electrochemistry, and materials composites, where sample homogeneity is critical.
Original languageEnglish
Article number118760
Number of pages12
JournalCarbon
Volume218
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Jan 2024

Funding

This work has been supported by the European Union ( ERC-2018-StG 804110-2D-PnictoChem & ERC-Proof of Concept Grant 101101079-2D4H2 ), the Spanish MICINN ( PID2022-143297NB-I00 , PDC2022-133997-I00 , TED2021-131347B–I00 and Excellence Unit María de Maeztu CEX2019-000919-M ), the Generalitat Valenciana ( CIDEGENT/2018/001 ), the Universitat de València and HUP/IIS La Fe ( VLC-BIOMED AP2022-27 ). Furthermore, the authors would like to thank the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) for financial support in scope of Collaborative Research Centre SFB 953 “Synthetic Carbon Allotropes” (Project-ID 182849149, project A03 and A09). M. A. L. acknowledges the Generalitat Valenciana for a postdoctoral fellowship ( CIAPOS/2021/255 ). EHÅ acknowledges the funding from the Research Council of Finland project number 355011 and JK acknowledge the funding from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) through the project P34797–N36 . The authors thank Dr M. D. Jordán Martín for her kind assistance with the XPS measurements, Ángel López for the impedance measurements, and Christian Olivares for his valuable help in the laboratory.

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 210004 Nanomaterials
  • 104011 Materials chemistry

Keywords

  • Analytical ultracentrifugation
  • Carbon materials
  • Carbon nano-onions
  • Exfoliation
  • Materials chemistry

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