Rapid characterization of carbon 2D materials
Industrial applications of nanomaterials commonly require their dispersion in solvents to embed them in final products. Examples of applications include battery electrodes, composite reinforcement, printed electronics, and many more. As nanomaterials exhibit a high surface-to-mass ratio, their surface properties, in particular surface chemistry, govern their interactions with the external environment. Therefore, these must be carefully characterized to optimize product performance.
However, characterizing nanomaterial dispersions is difficult to achieve because of the small length-scales, as well as the use of liquids, which are incompatible with the vacuum conditions employed in many ex-situ techniques. These typical measurement methods can be costly and time consuming and the pre-processing steps often employed to remove nanomaterials from liquid can potentially alter their material properties.
In a study featuring on the front cover of Nanoscale, researchers from the Surface Technology group at NPL demonstrated the use of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) proton relaxation to rapidly characterize the surface chemistry of 2D graphitic particles in liquids, in several minutes and without the need for any sample preparation. As NMR relaxation can be performed in-line, it has the potential to be employed as a quality control method by nanomaterials manufacturers.
More information: Sofia Marchesini et al. Using nuclear magnetic resonance proton relaxation to probe the surface chemistry of carbon 2D materials, Nanoscale (2021). DOI: 10.1039/D0NR08937K
Journal information: Nanoscale
Provided by National Physical Laboratory