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Millisecond lattice gasification for high-density CO2- and O2-sieving nanopores in single-layer graphene.

Shiqi HuangShaoxian LiLuis Francisco VillalobosMostapha DakhchouneMarina MicariDeepu J BabuMohammad Tohidi VahdatMounir MensiEmad OveisiKumar Varoon Agrawal
Published in: Science advances (2021)
Etching single-layer graphene to incorporate a high pore density with sub-angstrom precision in molecular differentiation is critical to realize the promising high-flux separation of similar-sized gas molecules, e.g., CO2 from N2 However, rapid etching kinetics needed to achieve the high pore density is challenging to control for such precision. Here, we report a millisecond carbon gasification chemistry incorporating high density (>1012 cm-2) of functional oxygen clusters that then evolve in CO2-sieving vacancy defects under controlled and predictable gasification conditions. A statistical distribution of nanopore lattice isomers is observed, in good agreement with the theoretical solution to the isomer cataloging problem. The gasification technique is scalable, and a centimeter-scale membrane is demonstrated. Last, molecular cutoff could be adjusted by 0.1 Å by in situ expansion of the vacancy defects in an O2 atmosphere. Large CO2 and O2 permeances (>10,000 and 1000 GPU, respectively) are demonstrated accompanying attractive CO2/N2 and O2/N2 selectivities.
Keyphrases
  • high density
  • sewage sludge
  • municipal solid waste
  • single molecule
  • room temperature
  • liquid chromatography
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals
  • mass spectrometry
  • walled carbon nanotubes