Hydrodynamic slip can align thin nanoplatelets in shear flow

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

C. Kamal (Queen Mary University of London)

Simon Gravelle (Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Queen Mary University of London)

L. Botto (Queen Mary University of London, TU Delft - Energy Technology)

Research Group
Energy Technology
Copyright
© 2020 Catherine Kamal, Simon Gravelle, L. Botto
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15939-w
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 Catherine Kamal, Simon Gravelle, L. Botto
Research Group
Energy Technology
Issue number
1
Volume number
11
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Abstract

The large-scale processing of nanomaterials such as graphene and MoS2 relies on understanding the flow behaviour of nanometrically-thin platelets suspended in liquids. Here we show, by combining non-equilibrium molecular dynamics and continuum simulations, that rigid nanoplatelets can attain a stable orientation for sufficiently strong flows. Such a stable orientation is in contradiction with the rotational motion predicted by classical colloidal hydrodynamics. This surprising effect is due to hydrodynamic slip at the liquid-solid interface and occurs when the slip length is larger than the platelet thickness; a slip length of a few nanometers may be sufficient to observe alignment. The predictions we developed by examining pure and surface-modified graphene is applicable to different solvent/2D material combinations. The emergence of a fixed orientation in a direction nearly parallel to the flow implies a slip-dependent change in several macroscopic transport properties, with potential impact on applications ranging from functional inks to nanocomposites.