Coupled electrokinetic transport through a nanoporous membrane: effects of pore interactions
Olivier Liot, Catherine Sempere, Christophe Ybert, Anne-Laure Biance

TL;DR
This study analyzes how pore interactions in ultrathin nanoporous membranes affect electrokinetic transport and energy conversion efficiency, highlighting the importance of pore spacing and organization.
Contribution
It provides a new expression for electroosmotic mobility considering pore interactions and demonstrates how pore arrangement influences transport properties and energy conversion.
Findings
Electroosmotic mobility depends mainly on pore spacing.
Transport properties are primarily governed by membrane porosity.
Increasing pore number can decrease energy conversion efficiency.
Abstract
Liquid transport through nanopore is central into many applications, from water purification to biosensing or energy harvesting. Ultimately thin nanopores are of major interest in these applications to increase driving potential and reduce as much as possible dissipation sources. We investigate here the efficiency of the electrical power generation through an ultrathin nanoporous membrane by means of streaming current (electrical current induced by ionic flow in the vicinity of the liquid/solid interface) or electroosmosis (flow rate induced by an electrical potential). Upscaling from one unique pore to a nanoporous membrane is not straightforward when we consider low aspect ratio nanopore because of 3D entrance effects, which lead to interactions between the pores. Whereas these interactions have already been considered for direct transport (hydrodynamic permeability of the membrane,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies · Membrane-based Ion Separation Techniques · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions
