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NanoSEC Seminar

Title
Fabrication, Electrokinetics, and Applications of Carbon Nanotube Membranes  
Guest Speaker
Prof. Ji Wu  
Guest Affiliation
Department of Chemistry, Georgia Southern University  
When
Friday, November 30, 2012 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm  
Location
Riverbend Research South Laboratory Auditorium  
Details

Recently carbon nanotube (CNT) membrane has been a subject of intensive research activities due to their unique attributes, such as i) a dramatically enhanced fluid flow, ii) functional chemistry at the CNT tip entrance for effective chemical and biological separations, and iii) electrically conductive carbon nanotubes allowing for efficient electrochemical functionalization and electro-osmosis pumping.1-5 Meanwhile, the estimated overall costs of drug addiction and abuse in the United States alone exceed half a trillion dollars annually as reported by National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Classical transdermal patches for drug addiction and abuse treatments like nicotine patch can only provide constant dosing rates. However many drug abuse and addiction treatments demands variable dosing rates. Herein, a relatively low-cost microtoming method has been developed to fabricate carbon nanotube (CNT) membranes in large scale. The tips of CNT membranes were functionalized using an efficient electrochemical grafting method, following by a series of chemical coupling reactions. It was demonstrated that Ionic mobilities through CNT cores are enhanced by a factor of ~4 with a significant rectification seen for large anion/cation mixtures. High electro-osmotic flows of ~3 cm/s-V is seen for ~ 1nm single walled CNTs and ~0.15 cm/s-V for ~ 7nm multi-walled CNTs. The enhanced electrophoretic and electro-osmotic phenomenon of CNT membranes have been successfully applied to a programmed transdermal nicotine patch that can provide therapeutically useful fluxes ranging from high (1.30.65 μmol/hr-cm2) and to low (0.330.22 μmol/hr-cm2) for efficient smoking cessation treatments (in vitro (human skin) & in vivo (hairless guinea pig)).

Bio: Dr. Ji Wu is an assistant professor of chemistry at Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA. He has been working as a postdoctoral scholar in University of Kentucky with research focus on the fabrication, electro-kinetics and applications of carbon nanotube membranes from 2007-2012. He received his PhD degree in Inorganic and Materials Chemistry from Texas Christian University in 2007, following his Advisor, J. L. Coffer. His PhD research was on erbium-doped semiconducting nanomaterials such as silicon and germanium nanowires. He also earned a Masters’ degree in Organometallic Chemistry from Anhui University (Hefei, China) in 2000. He has contributed over 20 publications on peer-reviewed journals, such as Nature Nano., PNAS, Nano Letters, Advanced Materials, J. Pharm. Sci. etc.

 

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