We report the temporal stability of the dispersion of single-wall carbon nanotubes in a binary solvent “water + glycerol” having eutectic composition (ca. 67% wt.) with sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate as a dispersant. The system procures good temporal and thermal stability: its absorption spectra demonstrate no changes during one-year storage with temperature spanning −40 to +40 °C. The system provides non-linear optical power limiting of the incident laser radiation (532 nm) in a one-shot and pulse-periodic regimes of its applying.
This work gives data on the stability of dispersions of single wall carbon nanotubes stabilized by sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate in binary polar solvents ''water þ antifreeze'' (glycerol, polyethyleneglycole) with eutectic compositions. The absorption spectra of the suspensions demonstrate no changes during 1-year storage with temperature spanning from À40 to þ40 8C. The systems provide relevant optical power limiting properties, the one with glycerol showing good resistance to optical bleaching effects. We also demonstrate that aqueous dispersions of nanotubes exhibit considerable enhancement of optical limiting parameters alongside an increase of the bundled material populace.
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