4.8 Article

Ion Gating in Nanopore Electrode Arrays with Hierarchically Organized pH-Responsive Block Copolymer Membranes

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 49, Pages 55116-55124

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c12926

Keywords

nanopore electrode arrays; block copolymers; redox cycling ion channels; pH gates; permselectivity

Funding

  1. Department of Energy Office of Science [DE FG02 07ER15851]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE 1904196]

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Inspired by biological ion channels, artificial nanopore-based architectures have been developed for smart ion/molecular transport control with potential applications to iontronics and energy conversion. Advances in nanofabrication technology enable simple, versatile construction methods, and post-fabrication functionalization delivers nanochannels with unique ion transportcontrol attributes. Here, we characterize a pH-responsive, charge-selective dual-gating block copolymer (BCP) membrane composed of polystyrene-b-poly(4-vinylpyridine) (PS48400-b-P4VP(21300)), capable of self-organizing into highly ordered nanocylindrical domains. Because the PS-b-P4VP membrane exhibits pH-dependent structural transitions, it is suitable for designing intelligent pH-gated biomimetic channels, for example, exhibiting on-off transport switching at pH values near the pK(a) of P4VP with excellent anion permselectivity at pH < pK(a). Introducing the BCP membrane onto nanopore electrode arrays (BCP@NEAs) allows the BCP to serve as a pH-responsive gate controlling ion transfer into the NEA nanopores. Such selectively transported and confined ions are detected by using a 100 nm gap dual-ring nanoelectrode structure capable of enhancing current output by efficient redox cycling with an amplification factor >10(2). In addition, BCP@NEAs exhibit extraordinary pH-gated ion selectivity, resulting in a 3380-fold current difference between anion and cation probes at pH 3.0. This hierarchically organized BCP-gated NEA system can serve as a template for the development of other stimulus-responsive ion gates, for example, those based on temperature and ligand gating, thus exploiting the intrinsic advantages of NEAs, such as enhanced sensitivity based on redox cycling, which may lead to technological applications such as engineered biosensors and iontronic devices.

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