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Ion-Specific Nanoconfinement Effect in Multilayered Graphene Membranes: A Combined Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Computational Study.

Diyan LiuZhiyuan XiongPeiyao WangQinghua LiangHaijin ZhuJefferson Zhe LiuMaria ForsythDan Li
Published in: Nano letters (2023)
Ion adsorption within nanopores is involved in numerous applications. However, a comprehensive understanding of the fundamental relationship between in-pore ion concentration and pore size, particularly in the sub-2 nm range, is scarce. This study investigates the ion-species-dependent concentration in multilayered graphene membranes (MGMs) with tunable nanoslit sizes (0.5-1.6 nm) using nuclear magnetic resonance and computational simulations. For Na + -based electrolytes in MGMs, the concentration of anions in graphene nanoslits increases in correlation with their chaotropic properties. As the nanoslit size decreases, the concentration of chaotropic ion (BF 4 - ) increases, whereas the concentration of kosmotropic ions (Cit 3- , PO 4 3- ) and other ions (Ac - , F - ) decreases or changes slightly. Notably, anions remain more concentrated than counter Na + ions, leading to electroneutrality breakdown and unipolar anion packing in MGMs. A continuum modeling approach, integrating molecular dynamic simulation with the Poisson-Boltzmann model, elucidates these observations by considering water-mediated ion-graphene non-electrostatic interactions and charge screening from graphene walls.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • ionic liquid
  • room temperature
  • carbon nanotubes
  • quantum dots
  • photodynamic therapy
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • computed tomography
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • solid state