Ultra-high permeable phenine nanotube membranes for water desalination

Naskar, Supriyo ; Sahoo, Anil Kumar ; Moid, Mohd ; Maiti, Prabal K. (2020) Ultra-high permeable phenine nanotube membranes for water desalination arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.12145 .

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Abstract

Nanopore desalination technology hinges on high water-permeable membranes which, at the same time, block ions efficiently. In this study, we consider a recently synthesized [Science 363, 151-155 (2019)] phenine nanotube (PNT) for water desalination applications. Using both equilibrium and non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations, we show that the PNT membrane completely rejects salts, but permeates water at a rate which is an order-of-magnitude higher than that of all the membranes used for water filtration. We provide the microscopic mechanisms of salt rejection and fast water-transport by calculating the free-energy landscapes and electrostatic potential profiles. A collective diffusion model accurately predicts the water permeability obtained from the simulations over a wide range of pressure gradients. We propose a method to calculate the osmotic pressure () from the simulation data and find that across the membrane is very low (~1-2 MPa), which thus makes it a suitable nanomaterial for energy-efficient reverse osmosis. These remarkable properties of PNT can be applied in various nanofluidic applications, such as ion-selective channels, ionic transistors, sensing, molecular sieving, and blue energy harvesting.

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