Ballistic molecular transport through two-dimensional channels
A. Keerthi, A. K. Geim, A. Janardanan, A. P. Rooney, A. Esfandiar, S., Hu, S. A. Dar, I. V. Grigorieva, S. J. Haigh, F. C. Wang, B. Radha

TL;DR
This study reveals that gas transport through atomically-flat, angstrom-scale 2D channels can be ballistic and quantum effects significantly influence flow, challenging classical diffusion models and enabling quantum-controlled permeation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that surface atomic landscape and quantum effects determine gas flow regimes in 2D channels, showing ballistic transport and quantum matter-wave influences at room temperature.
Findings
Helium flows faster than Knudsen theory predicts due to specular surface scattering.
Molybdenum disulfide channels exhibit slower, diffusion-like permeation.
Reversed isotope effect indicates quantum matter-wave contributions.
Abstract
Gas permeation through nanoscale pores is ubiquitous in nature and plays an important role in a plethora of technologies. Because the pore size is typically smaller than the mean free path of gas molecules, their flow is conventionally described by the Knudsen theory that assumes diffuse reflection (random-angle scattering) at confining walls. This assumption has proven to hold surprisingly well in experiment, and only a few cases of partially specular (mirror-like) reflection are known. Here we report gas transport through angstrom-scale channels with atomically-flat walls and show that surface scattering can be both diffuse or specular, depending on fine details of the surface atomic landscape, and quantum effects contribute to the specularity at room temperature. The channels made from graphene or boron nitride allow a helium gas flow that is orders of magnitude faster than expected…
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