Published November 11, 2025
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Size effect on thermal conductivity and stability of TiO2/MWCNT-based hybrid nanofluids synthesized via probe ultrasonication.

  • 1. Nanosciences African Network, Materials Research Dept. iThemba LABS/National, Research Foundation of South Africa 1 Old Faure road, PO Box 722 Somerset West South Africa.
  • 2. Department of Engineering Sciences and Physics, Buein Zahra Technical University Buein Zahra 3451866391 Iran.
  • 3. UNESCO-UNISA Africa Chair in Nanosciences-Nanotechnology, College of Graduate Studies, University of South Africa Muckleneuk ridge, PO Box 392 Pretoria South Africa azizis@unisa.ac.za maazam@unisa.ac.za.
  • 4. Chemistry Department, Office 2-33, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Bellville Campus Private Bag X17 Bellville 7535 Cape Town South Africa.

Description

This study reports the enhancement of thermal conductivity in hybrid TiO2 grafted onto multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) dispersed in an ethylene glycol nanofluid synthesized by a scalable probe-ultrasonication process. The hybrid nanofluids were formulated at ultra-low loadings; MWCNT = 0.001 wt% (fixed) and TiO2 = 0.001-0.01 wt% (15 nm and 30 nm). The 15 nm TiO2 sample at 0.01 wt% achieved 16.7% thermal conductivity enhancement at 70 °C while maintaining >4 weeks stability. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report achieving double-digit conductivity improvement at ≤0.01 wt% solids using a surfactant-free, scalable probe-ultrasonication route. Homogeneous and stable TiO2/MWCNT nanofluids were produced using a surfactant-free approach, and their performance was validated through Raman spectroscopy, Zetasizer, TEM, and UV-Vis analyses. Formulations with ultra-low loadings, MWCNT = 0.001 wt% (fixed) and TiO2 = 0.001-0.01 wt% (15 or 30 nm), were investigated. The sample containing 15 nm TiO2 at 0.01 wt% exhibited a reproducible 16.7% thermal-conductivity enhancement at 70 °C and maintained colloidal stability for over four weeks. Such a high enhancement at extremely low solid content in an ethylene glycol matrix, achieved through a surfactant-free and scalable ultrasonication route, has not been previously reported.
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