Deagglomeration and surface modification of thermally annealed nanoscale diamond

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2011 Feb 1;354(1):23-30. doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2010.10.044. Epub 2010 Oct 25.

Abstract

Thermally annealed nanodiamond has been functionalized by C-C coupling of the partially graphitized diamond surface using aryl diazonium salts. Depending on the terminal functional groups, the modified bucky diamond nanoparticles show good solubility (up to 0.63mgmL(-1)) in different solvents. The agglomerate size of the originally strongly bound detonation diamond (>0.5μm) is substantially reduced to ∼20-50nm by this chemical procedure and without using mechanical techniques such as strong ultrasound or milling. Arylation with functionalized aryl diazonium salts carrying COOH, SO(3)H, NO(2) or bromoethyl groups opens the way for further covalent grafting of organic structures. Arylation with Ar-COOH or Ar-SO(3)H leads to the formation of stable colloidal solutions in water and physiological media (i.e. PBS buffer), an important prerequisite for biomedical applications.