4.6 Article

Quantifying barriers to monovalent anion transport in narrow non-polar pores

期刊

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
卷 14, 期 33, 页码 11633-11638

出版社

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c2cp41641g

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  1. IChemE, Joint Research Institute in Energy (Heriot-Watt University)
  2. School of Engineering and Physical Sciences (Heriot-Watt University)
  3. Overseas Research Students Awards Scheme
  4. James Watt Scholarship
  5. National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) National Facility (Australia)

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The transport of anionic drinking water contaminants (fluoride, chloride, nitrate and nitrite) through narrow pores ranging in effective radius from 2.5 to 6.5 angstrom was systematically evaluated using molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate the magnitude and origin of energetic barriers encountered in nanofiltration. Free energy profiles for ion transport through the pores show that energy barriers depend on pore size and ion properties and that there are three key regimes that affect transport. The first is where the ion can fit in the pore with its full inner hydration shell, the second is where the pore size is between the bare ion and hydrated radius, and the third is where the ion size approaches that of the pore. Energy barriers in the first regime are relatively small and due to rearrangement of the inner hydration shell and/or displacement of further hydration shells. Energy barriers in the second regime are due to partial dehydration and are larger than barriers seen in the first regime. In the third regime, the pore becomes too small for bare ions to fit regardless of hydration and thus energy barriers are very high. In the second regime where partial dehydration controls transport, the trend in the slopes of the change in energy barrier with pore size corresponds to the hydration strength of the anions.

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