Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repo.lib.jfn.ac.lk/ujrr/handle/123456789/242
Title: Investigating the reactive sites and the anomalously large changes in surface pKa values of chemically modified carbon nanotubes of different morphologies
Authors: Masheter, A.T
Abiman, P.
Wildgoose, G.G
Wong, E
Xiao, L
Rees, N.V
Taylor, R
Attard, G.A
Baron, R
Crossley, A
Jones, J.H
Compton, R.G
Issue Date: 2007
Publisher: The Royal Society of Chemistry
Abstract: "Bamboo-like" multiwalled (b-MWCNT), "hollow-tube" multiwalled (h-MWCNT) and single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT), chemically modified with 1-anthraquinonyl (AQ) or 4-nitrophenyl (NP) groups, are characterized using voltammetric, electron microscopic and Raman spectroscopic techniques. The pKa values of the AQ-modified CNTs are found to be shifted by greater than three units when compared to the pKa values of anthrahydroquinone (AHQ, the reduced form of AQ) in aqueous solution to beyond pH 14. These large changes in the surface pKa values of the modified CNTs are explored further by comparing the pKa values of CNTs modified with an anthraquinonyl-2-carboxylic acid group. These groups are attached to the CNT surface via the formation of an amide bond with an aminophenyl "spacer" unit derived from the chemical reduction of NP modified CNTs. The location of reactive sites on the CNT surface is investigated and their influence on the pKa of the modified materials is discussed. Comparison with modified pyrolytic graphite electrodes exposing pure edge-plane or pure basal-plane crystal faces indicates that the modifying aryl groups are predominantly located on edge-plane like defects at the tube ends of MWCNTs. The effect of polymer formation on electron transfer kinetics of b-MWCNTs and h-MWCNTs is also discussed. In contrast SWCNTs show both significant side-wall functionalisation and fast electron transfer kinetics which is attributed to their different electronic structure.
URI: http://repo.lib.jfn.ac.lk/ujrr/handle/123456789/242
ISSN: 09599428
Appears in Collections:Chemistry



Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.