Litcius/Paper detail

Nanofluidic sensing inspired by the anomalous water dynamics in electrical angstrom-scale channels

Tianshu Chu, Ze Zhou, Pengfei Tian, Tingting Yu, Cheng Lian, Bowei Zhang, Fu‐Zhen Xuan

2024Nature Communications22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Manipulation of confined water dynamics by voltage keeps great importance for diverse applications. However, limitations on the membrane functions, voltage-control range, and unclear dynamics need to be addressed. Herein, we report an anomalous electrically controlled gating phenomenon on cation-intercalated multi-layer Ti3C2 membranes and reveal the confined water dynamics. The water permeation rate was improved rapidly following the application and rise of voltage and finally reached a maximum rate at 0.9 V. The permeation rate starts to decrease from 0.9 V. Below 0.9 V, the electric field affects the charge and polarity of water molecules and then leads to ordered and denser rearrangement in the two-dimensional (2D) channel to accelerate the permeation rate. Above 0.9 V, with the assistance of metal cations, the surge in current induced aggregation of water molecules into clusters, thereby limiting the water mobility. Based on these findings, a high-performance humidity sensor was developed by simultaneously optimizing the response and recovery speeds through electric manipulation. This work provides flexible strategies in intelligent membrane design and nanofluidic sensing. Nanoconfined water has unique properties, often leading to the discovery of unexpected phenomena, which play key roles in applications such as sensing, filtration, and catalysis. Here authors report electrically controlled gating in cation (K+/Li+) intercalated multilayer Ti3C2 and describe anomalous water dynamics in electrical angstrom-scale channels.

Topics & Concepts

PermeationChemical physicsGatingMaterials scienceElectric fieldMembraneNanotechnologyVoltageMolecular dynamicsWater transportMoleculeChemistryWater flowPhysicsBiophysicsEnvironmental scienceComputational chemistryBiologyQuantum mechanicsOrganic chemistryBiochemistryEnvironmental engineeringMXene and MAX Phase MaterialsFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance DevicesNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies
Nanofluidic sensing inspired by the anomalous water dynamics in electrical angstrom-scale channels | Litcius