Observation and Isochoric Thermodynamic Analysis of Partially Water- Filled 1.32 and 1.45 nm Diameter Carbon Nanotubes
S Faucher and M Kuehne and H Oliaei and RP Misra and SX Li and NR Aluru and MS Strano, NANO LETTERS, 23, 389-397 (2023).
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00911
Recent measurements of fluids under extreme confinement, including water within narrow carbon nanotubes, exhibit marked deviations from continuum theoretical descriptions. In this work, we generate precise carbon nanotube replicates that are filled with water, closed from external mass transfer, and studied over a wide temperature range by Raman spectroscopy. We study segments that are empty, partially filled, and completely filled with condensed water from -80 to 120 degrees C. Partially filled, nanodroplet states contain submicron vapor-like and liquid-like domains and are analyzed using a Clausius-Clapeyron-type model, yielding heats of condensation of water inside closed 1.32 nm diameter carbon nanotubes (3.32 +/- 0.10 kJ/mol and 3.72 +/- 0.11 kJ/mol) and 1.45 nm diameter carbon nanotubes (3.50 +/- 0.07 kJ/ mol) that are lower than the bulk enthalpy of vaporization and closer to the bulk enthalpy of fusion. Favored partial filling fractions are calculated, highlighting the effect of subnanometer changes in confining diameter on fluid properties and suggesting the promise of molecular engineering of nanoconfined liquid/vapor interfaces for water treatment or membrane distillation.
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