Published September 10, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

In situ generation of (sub) nanometer pores in MoS2 membranes for ion-selective transport

Description

Ion selective membranes are fundamental components of biological, energy, and computing systems. The fabrication of solid-state ultrathin membranes that can separate ions of similar size and the same charge with both high selectivity and permeance remains a challenge, however. Here, we present a method, utilizing the application of a remote electric field, to fabricate a high-density of (sub)nm pores in situ. This method takes advantage of the grain boundaries in few-layer polycrystalline MoS2 to enable the synthesis of nanoporous membranes with average pore size tunable from <1 to ~4 nm in diameter (with in situ pore expansion resolution of ~0.2 nm2 s−1). These membranes demonstrate selective transport of monovalent ions (K+, Na+ and Li+) as well as divalent ions (Mg2+ and Ca2+), outperforming existing two-dimensional material nanoporous membranes that display similar total permeance. We investigate the mechanism of selectivity using molecular dynamics simulations and unveil that the interactions between cations and the sluggish water confined to the pore, as well as cation-anion interactions, result in the different transport behaviors observed between ions.

Data availability

The data that supports the findings of the study are included in the main text and supplementary information files. Raw data can be obtained from the corresponding author upon request. Source Data file has been deposited in Zenodo under the DOI link https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13117482.

Code for processing current-voltage traces and generating and processing molecular dynamics trajectories are available upon request.

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In-situ-generation-of-sub-nanometer-pores-in-MoS2-membranes-for-ion-selective-transport.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-52109-8
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13376

Funding

Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy
DE-SC0023317
National Science Foundation
DMR-2011854

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering