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Electrically controlled water permeation through graphene oxide membranes

Authors :
Zhou, K. -G.
Vasu, K. S.
Cherian, C. T.
Neek-Amal, M.
Zhang, J. C.
Ghorbanfekr-Kalashami, H.
Huang, K.
Marshall, O. P.
Kravets, V. G.
Abraham, J.
Su, Y.
Grigorenko, A. N.
Pratt, A.
Geim, A. K.
Peeters, F. M.
Novoselov, K. S.
Nair, R. R.
Source :
Nature 559, 236-240, 2018
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Developing 'smart' membranes that allow precise and reversible control of molecular permeation using external stimuli would be of intense interest for many areas of science: from physics and chemistry to life-sciences. In particular, electrical control of water permeation through membranes is a long-sought objective and is of crucial importance for healthcare and related areas. Currently, such adjustable membranes are limited to the modulation of wetting of the membranes and controlled ion transport, but not the controlled mass flow of water. Despite intensive theoretical work yielding conflicting results, the experimental realisation of electrically controlled water permeation has not yet been achieved. Here we report electrically controlled water permeation through micrometre-thick graphene oxide (GO) membranes. By controllable electric breakdown, conductive filaments are created in the GO membrane. The electric field concentrated around such current carrying filaments leads to controllable ionisation of water molecules in graphene capillaries, allowing precise control of water permeation: from ultrafast permeation to complete blocking. Our work opens up an avenue for developing smart membrane technologies and can revolutionize the field of artificial biological systems, tissue engineering and filtration.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature 559, 236-240, 2018
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1805.06390
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0292-y