| Literature DB >> 35549075 |
Everett S Zofchak1, Zidan Zhang1, Bill K Wheatle1, Rahul Sujanani1, Samuel J Warnock2, Theodore J Dilenschneider1, Kalin G Hanson3, Shou Zhao3, Sanjoy Mukherjee4, Mahdi M Abu-Omar3,5, Christopher M Bates2,3,4,5, Benny D Freeman1, Venkat Ganesan1.
Abstract
Direct lithium extraction via membrane separations has been fundamentally limited by lack of monovalent ion selectivity exhibited by conventional polymeric membranes, particularly between sodium and lithium ions. Recently, a 12-Crown-4-functionalized polynorbornene membrane was shown to have the largest lithium/sodium permeability selectivity observed in a fully aqueous system to date. Using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations, we reveal that this selectivity is due to strong interactions between sodium ions and 12-Crown-4 moieties, which reduce sodium ion diffusivity while leaving lithium ion mobility relatively unaffected. Moreover, the ion diffusivities in the membrane, when scaled by their respective solution diffusivities and free ion fractions, can be collapsed to an almost universal relationship depending on solvent volume fraction.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35549075 DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.1c00243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Macro Lett ISSN: 2161-1653 Impact factor: 6.903