Spontaneous and Selective Potassium Transport through a Suspended Tailor-Cut Ti3C2Tx MXene Film
JC Lao and K Zhou and SF Pan and JY Luo and J Gao and AP Dong and L Jiang, ACS NANO, 16, 9142-9149 (2022).
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c01304
Biological ion pumps selectively transport target ions against the concentration gradient, a process that is crucial to maintaining the out-of-equilibrium states of cells. Building an ion pump with ion selectivity has been challenging. Here we show that a Ti3C2Tx MXene film suspended in air with a trapezoidal shape spontaneously pumps K+ ions from the base end to the tip end and exhibits a K+/Na+ selectivity of 4. Such a phenomenon is attributed to a range of properties of MXene. Thanks to the high stability of MXene in water and the dynamic equilibrium between evaporation and swelling, the film keeps a narrow interlayer spacing of similar to 0.3 nm when its two ends are connected to reservoirs. Because of the polar electrical structure and hydrophilicity of the MXene nanosheet, K+ ions experience a low energy barrier of similar to 4.6 k(B)T when entering these narrow interlayer spacings. Through quantitative simulations and consistent experimental results, we further show that the narrow spacings exhibit a higher energy barrier to Na+, resulting in K+/Na+ selectivity. Finally, we show that the spontaneous ion transport is driven by the asymmetric evaporation of the interlayer water across the film, a mechanism that is similar to pressure driven streaming current. This work shows how ion transport properties can be facilely manipulated by tuning the macroscopic shape of nanofluidic materials, which may attract interest in the interface of kirigami technologies and nanofluidics and show potential in energy and separation applications.
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