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Switchable Ion Current Saturation Regimes Enabled via Heterostructured Nanofluidic Devices Based on Metal–Organic Frameworks

Gregorio Laucirica, Juan A. Allegretto, Michael F. Wagner, María Eugenia Toimil‐Molares, C. Trautmann, Matías Rafti, Waldemar A. Marmisollé, Omar Azzaroni

2022Advanced Materials38 citationsDOI

Abstract

The use of track-etched membranes allows further fine-tuning of transport regimes and thus enables their use in (bio)sensing and energy-harvesting applications, among others. Recently, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been combined with such membranes to further increase their potential. Herein, the creation of a single track-etched nanochannel modified with the UiO-66 MOF is proposed. By the interfacial growth method, UiO-66-confined synthesis fills the nanochannel completely and smoothly, yet its constructional porosity renders a heterostructure along the axial coordinate of the channel. The MOF heterostructure confers notorious changes in the transport regime of the nanofluidic device. In particular, the tortuosity provided by the micro- and mesostructure of UiO-66 added to its charged state leads to iontronic outputs characterized by an asymmetric ion current saturation for transmembrane voltages exceeding 0.3 V. Remarkably, this behavior can be easily and reversibly modulated by changing the pH of the media and it can also be maintained for a wide range of KCl concentrations. In addition, it is found that the modified-nanochannel functionality cannot be explained by considering just the intrinsic microporosity of UiO-66, but rather the constructional porosity that arises during the MOF growth process plays a central and dominant role.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceHeterojunctionNanotechnologyMembranePorosityMetal-organic frameworkTortuosityIonSaturation (graph theory)MetalVoltageOptoelectronicsAdsorptionChemistryComposite materialPhysicsOrganic chemistryCombinatoricsMathematicsBiochemistryQuantum mechanicsMetallurgyNanopore and Nanochannel Transport StudiesMetal-Organic Frameworks: Synthesis and ApplicationsFuel Cells and Related Materials