4.8 Article

Mass Transport via In-Plane Nanopores in Graphene Oxide Membranes

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 22, Issue 12, Pages 4941-4948

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c01615

Keywords

mass transport; angstrom con fi nement; hydrogen network; water transport; ethanol transport; nano porous materials

Funding

  1. UNSW Scientia Ph.D. Scholarship
  2. Alexander-von-Humboldt-Foundation
  3. RADIATE project from the EU Research and Innovation programme HORIZON 2020 [824096]
  4. German Research Foundation (DFG) [SCHL 384/20-1, 406129719]
  5. Scientia Fellowship scheme at The University of New South Wales (UNSW)
  6. ARC [DE210101259]
  7. Australian Research Council [DE210101259] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Research shows that high-density in-plane pores in graphene oxide membranes do not necessarily result in higher water permeability. Membranes with high in-plane pore density but low oxygen functionalities may completely block water, but exhibit enhanced permeation when using water-ethanol mixtures.
Angstrom-confined solvents in 2D laminates can travel through interlayer spacings, through gaps between adjacent sheets, and via in-plane pores. Among these, experimental access to investigate the mass transport through in-plane pores is lacking. Our experiments allow an understanding of this mass transport via the controlled variation of oxygen functionalities, size and density of in-plane pores in graphene oxide membranes. Contrary to expectations, our transport experiments show that higher in-plane pore densities may not necessarily lead to higher water permeability. We observed that membranes with a high in-plane pore density but a low amount of oxygen functionalities exhibit a complete blockage of water. However, when water- ethanol mixtures with a weaker hydrogen network are used, these membranes show an enhanced permeation. Our combined experimental and computational results suggest that the transport mechanism is governed by the attraction of the solvents toward the pores with functional groups and hindered by the strong hydrogen network of water formed under angstrom confinement.

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