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Asphaltene-Derived Graphene Quantum Dots for Controllable Coatings on Glass, Fabrics, and Aerogels.

Razieh Firouzi-HajiMaryam AghajamaliHassan HassanzadehQiuyun LuXuehua ZhangJonathan G-C VeinotAlkiviathes Meldrum
Published in: ACS omega (2023)
Graphene quantum dots (GQDs) derived from natural asphaltene byproducts can produce controlled hydrophobic or hydrophilic interfaces on glass, fabrics, and aerogels. A set of facile solvent extraction methods were used to isolate and chemically prepare materials with different surface functionalities from a commercially derived asphaltene precursor. The organic-soluble fraction was used to create hydrophobic and water-repellent surfaces on glass and cotton fabrics. The GQD solutions could also penetrate the pores of a silica aerogel, rendering it hydrophobic. Alternatively, by extracting the more polar fraction of the GQDs and oxidizing their surfaces, we also demonstrate strongly hydrophilic coatings. This work shows that naturally abundant GQD-containing materials can produce interfaces with the desired wettability properties through a straightforward tuning of the solvent extraction procedure. Owing to their natural abundance, low toxicity, and strong fluorescence, asphaltene-derived GQDs could thus be applied, in bulk, toward a wide range of tunable surface coatings. This approach, moreover, uses an important large-scale hydrocarbon waste material, thereby offering a sustainable alternative to the disposal of asphaltene wastes.
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