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  4. Nanosheet size-dependent rheology, microstructure, adsorption properties of graphene oxide-electrolyte dispersions and adsorbents
 
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Nanosheet size-dependent rheology, microstructure, adsorption properties of graphene oxide-electrolyte dispersions and adsorbents

Source
Synthetic Metals
ISSN
03796779
Date Issued
2020-11-01
Author(s)
Ojha, Abhijeet
Ibrahim, Helen
Alyabyeva, Natalia
Lazzari, Rémi
Goldmann, Michel
Thareja, Prachi  
DOI
10.1016/j.synthmet.2020.116494
Volume
269
Abstract
The variation of lateral dimensions of GO nanosheets by subjecting them to different ultrasonication time (t = 30, 60, and 120 min) influences the rheology, microstructure, and adsorption capacity of graphene oxide (GO) suspensions. The average storage modulus (G'<inf>p</inf>) of GO aqueous dispersions (volume fraction (ϕ<inf>GO</inf>) = 0.018) varies as GO-30 < GO-60 < GO-120, although the C/O of GO nanosheets does not change significantly with ultrasonication. Addition of 10<sup>−5</sup> M – 10<sup>-1</sup> M NaCl and MgCl<inf>2</inf> lead to a rise in G'<inf>p</inf> as compared to electrolyte-free suspensions with the formation of liquid-like, fragile gels and solid gel-like samples. Independent of time of ultrasonication, solid gels are formed at 10<sup>-1</sup> M of electrolytes. The maximum G'<inf>p</inf> is observed in gels of GO-30 with 10<sup>-1</sup> M MgCl<inf>2</inf>. We hypothesize that an increase in ultrasonication time causes the formation of new nanosheets with un-functionalized edges. While Na<sup>+</sup> screens the negative charge of GO causing aggregation, but Mg<sup>2+</sup> not only screens but also interacts with carboxyl groups of GO nanosheets. Therefore, the degree of Mg<sup>2+</sup> bridging the GO nanosheets is the lowest in GO-120 and the highest in GO-30 suspensions. The adsorption capacity of methylene blue (MB) on GO-120-electrolyte lyophilized gels is the smallest, in agreement with the weak cross-linking and mechanical strength of these gels.
Publication link
https://hal.science/hal-02995172
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/23954
Subjects
Adsorption | Gel | Graphene oxide | Microstructure | Rheology
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