Fast Mass Transport Through Sub-2-Nanometer Carbon Nanotubes

Jason K. Holt(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Hyung Gyu Park(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Yinmin Wang(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Michael Stadermann(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Alexander B. Artyukhin(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Costas P. Grigoropoulos(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Aleksandr Noy(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Olgica Bakajin(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Science
May 18, 2006
Cited by 2,961

Abstract

We report gas and water flow measurements through microfabricated membranes in which aligned carbon nanotubes with diameters of less than 2 nanometers serve as pores. The measured gas flow exceeds predictions of the Knudsen diffusion model by more than an order of magnitude. The measured water flow exceeds values calculated from continuum hydrodynamics models by more than three orders of magnitude and is comparable to flow rates extrapolated from molecular dynamics simulations. The gas and water permeabilities of these nanotube-based membranes are several orders of magnitude higher than those of commercial polycarbonate membranes, despite having pore sizes an order of magnitude smaller. These membranes enable fundamental studies of mass transport in confined environments, as well as more energy-efficient nanoscale filtration.


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