Ion Current Rectification and Long-Range Interference in Conical Silicon Micropores
Mark Aarts, Willem Boon, Blaise Cu\'enod, M. Dijkstra, Ren\'e van Roij, and Esther Alarcon-Llado

TL;DR
This study demonstrates ion current rectification in micron-sized conical silicon micropores, revealing the importance of entrance resistance and long-range pore interactions, with implications for designing efficient ionic diodes.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive analytical framework for understanding ICR in large, micron-sized conical pores, highlighting the role of surface charge and pore interactions.
Findings
ICR observed in micron-sized conical silicon pores.
Entrance resistance influences both conductance and rectification.
Pore-pore interactions decay long-range, affecting ICR in sparse arrays.
Abstract
Fluidic devices exhibiting ion current rectification (ICR), or ionic diodes, are of broad interest for applications including desalination, energy harvesting, and sensing, amongst others. For such applications a large conductance is desirable which can be achieved by simultaneously using thin membranes and wide pores. In this paper we demonstrate ICR in micron sized conical channels in a thin silicon membrane with pore diameters comparable to the membrane thickness but both much larger than the electrolyte screening length. We show that for these pores the entrance resistance is not only key to Ohmic conductance around 0 V, but also for understanding ICR, both of which we measure experimentally and capture within a single analytic theoretical framework. The only fit parameter in this theory is the membrane surface potential, for which we find that it is voltage dependent and its value…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies · Semiconductor materials and devices · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
