4.8 Article

High-Performance Hemofiltration via Molecular Sieving and Ultra-Low Friction in Carbon Nanotube Capillary Membranes

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202304672

Keywords

albumin retention; carbon nanotube membranes; carbon nanotubes; enhanced middle molecule clearance; Ficoll sieving; hemofiltration/hemodialysis; hydraulic permeability

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This study demonstrates the scalable fabrication of wafer-scale carbon nanotube (CNT) membranes with highly aligned, low-friction, straight channels/capillaries and narrow pore-diameter distributions for hemofiltration/hemodialysis. The CNT membranes show significantly higher hydraulic permeability and enhanced removal of middle molecules compared to commercial membranes, while maintaining comparable albumin retention. The unique transport characteristics of CNTs offer transformative advances for hemofiltration and have potential applications in other bio-systems.
Conventional dialyzer membranes typically comprise of unevenly distributed polydisperse, tortuous, rough pores, embedded in relatively thick approximate to 20-50 mu m polymer layers wherein separation occurs via size exclusion as well as differences in diffusivity of the permeating species. However, transport in such polymeric pores is increasingly hindered as the molecule size approaches the pore dimension, resulting in significant retention of undesirable middle molecules (>= 15-60 kDa) and uremic toxins. Enhanced removal of middle molecules is usually accompanied by high albumin loss (approximate to 66 kDa) causing hypoalbuminemia. Here, the scalable bottom-up fabrication of wafer-scale carbon nanotube (CNT) membranes with highly aligned, low-friction, straight-channels/capillaries and narrow pore-diameter distributions (approximate to 0.5-4.5 nm) is demonstrated, to overcome persistent challenges in hemofiltration/hemodialysis. Using fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-Ficoll 70 and albumin in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) as well as in bovine blood plasma, it is shown that CNT membranes can allow for significantly higher hydraulic permeability (more than an order of magnitude when normalized to pore area) than commercial high-flux hemofiltration/hemodialysis membranes (HF 400), as well as greatly enhance removal of middle molecules while maintaining comparable albumin retention. These findings are rationalized via an N-pore transport model that highlights the critical role of molecular flexing and deformation during size-selective transport within nanoscale confinements of the CNTs. The unique transport characteristics of CNTs coupled with size-exclusion and wafer-scale fabrication offer transformative advances for hemofiltration, and the obtained insight into molecular transport can aid advancements in several other bio-systems/applications beyond hemofiltration/hemodialysis.

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