Ion-dipole interactions are asymptotically unscreened by water in dipolar nanopores, yielding patterned ion distributions
Kevin Leung

TL;DR
This paper investigates how dipole-lined nanopores influence electrolyte behavior, revealing that ion-dipole interactions remain unscreened by water, causing charge segregation and unique ion transport properties.
Contribution
It demonstrates that dipole layers in nanopores lead to unscreened ion-dipole interactions, resulting in charge segregation and novel transport phenomena not previously well understood.
Findings
Ion-dipole interactions are asymptotically unscreened by water.
Dipolar nanopores induce charge segregation and insulating behavior.
Potential for novel current-voltage characteristics in nanopores.
Abstract
The permeation, rejection, and transport of electrolytes in water-filled nanopores are critical to ion current gating and desalinalion processes in synthetic porous membranes and the functions of biological ion channels. Mile the effects of confinement pore polarizability, and discrete channel charge sites have been much studied, the potentially dramatic impact of dipole-lined synthetic pores on electrolytes has seldom been addressed. Dipole layers naturally occur on the interior surfaces of certain nanopores, leading to intrinsic preference for cations or anions. This preference can be exploited when the membrane surface is functionalized differently from the pore interior or when there are alternating dipolar/nondipolar stretches inside a long pore. The dipole-ion interaction is asymptotically unscreened by water, leading to ionic, charge segregated, insulating behavior that can block…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies · Electrochemical Analysis and Applications · Fuel Cells and Related Materials
