| Literature DB >> 29741359 |
Yang Yang, Petr Dementyev, Niklas Biere, Daniel Emmrich, Patrick Stohmann, Riko Korzetz, Xianghui Zhang, André Beyer, Sascha Koch, Dario Anselmetti, Armin Gölzhäuser.
Abstract
The provision of clean water is a global challenge, and membrane filtration is a key technology to address it. Conventional filtration membranes are constrained by a trade-off between permeance and selectivity. Recently, some nanostructured membranes demonstrated the ability to overcome this limitation by utilizing well-defined carbon nanoconduits that allow a coordinated passage of water molecules. The fabrication of these materials is still very challenging, but their performance inspires research toward nanofabricated membranes. This study reports on molecularly thin membranes with sub-nanometer channels that combine high water selectivity with an exceptionally high permeance. Carbon nanomembranes (CNMs) of ∼1.2 nm thickness are fabricated from terphenylthiol (TPT) monolayers. Scanning probe microscopy and transport measurements reveal that TPT CNMs consist of a dense network of sub-nanometer channels that efficiently block the passage of most gases and liquids. However, water passes through with an extremely high permeance of ∼1.1 × 10-4 mol·m-2·s-1·Pa-1, as does helium, but with a ∼ 2500 times lower flux. Assuming all channels in a TPT CNM are active in mass transport, we find a single-channel permeation of ∼66 water molecules·s-1·Pa-1. This suggests that water molecules translocate fast and cooperatively through the sub-nanometer channels, similar to carbon nanotubes and membrane proteins (aquaporins). CNMs are thus scalable two-dimensional sieves that can be utilized toward energy-efficient water purification.Entities:
Keywords: 2D material; membrane separation; self-assembled monolayer; sub-nanometer channels; water purification
Year: 2018 PMID: 29741359 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b01266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881