LIVERMORE,
Calif. — A nanotube membrane on a silicon chip the
size of a quarter may offer a cheaper way to remove
salt from water.
Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
have created a membrane made of carbon nanotubes
and silicon that may offer, among many possible applications,
a less expensive desalinization.
The nanotubes, special molecules made of carbon
atoms in a unique arrangement, are hollow and more
than 50,000 times thinner than a human hair. Billions
of these tubes act as the pores in the membrane.
The super smooth inside of the nanotubes allow liquids
and gases to rapidly flow through, while the tiny
pore size can block larger molecules. This previously
unobserved phenomenon opens a vast array of possible
applications.
The team was able to measure flows of liquids and
gases by making a membrane on a silicon chip with
carbon nanotube pores making up the holes of the
membrane. The membrane is created by filling the
gaps between aligned carbon nanotubes with a ceramic
matrix material. The pores are so small that only
six water molecules could fit across their diameter.
“The gas and water flows that we measured are 100
to 10,000 times faster than what classical models
predict,” said Olgica Bakajin, the Livermore scientist
who led the research. “This is like having a garden
hose that can deliver as much water in the same amount
of time as fire hose that is ten times larger.”
The
research resulted from collaboration between Olgica
Bakajin and Aleksandr Noy, who were both recruited
to Lawrence Livermore Lab as “Lawrence Fellows” – the
Laboratory's initiative to bring in young talented
scientists. The principal contributors to the work
are postdoctoral researcher Jason Holt and Hyung
Gyu Park, a UC Berkeley mechanical engineering graduate
student and student employee at Livermore. Other
LLNL co-authors included Yinmin Wang, staff scientist,
Michael Stadermann, postdoctoral researcher, and
Alexander Artyukhin, graduate student employee. The
team collaborated with UC Berkeley's professor of
mechanical engineering Costas Grigoropoulos. David
Eaglesham, now at Applied Materials, also contributed
in the early stages of this work.
Membranes that have carbon nanotubes as pores could
be used in desalination and demineralization. Salt
removal from water, commonly performed through reverse
osmosis, uses less permeable membranes, requires large
amounts of pressure and is quite expensive. However,
these more permeable nanotube membranes could reduce
the energy costs of desalination by up to 75 percent
compared to conventional membranes used in reverse
osmosis.
Carbon nanotubes are a unique platform for studying
molecular transport and nanofluidics. Their nanometer-size,
atomically smooth surfaces and similarity to cellular
water transport channels make them exceptionally
suited for this purpose. |
“Since
water does not wet the outside surface of carbon
nanotubes, we were skeptical that water would enter
into them, let alone flow really fast,” Bakajin said. “But
the molecular dynamics simulations in the literature
predicted fast flow, so we wanted to test the predictions.”
“The first time we set up an experiment with water,
we left it overnight thinking that the water level
above the membrane would not budge,” Park said. “Instead,
we came back in the morning and there was a little
puddle on the floor under the membrane.”
Holt
added: “The
first thing that came to mind was that the membrane
broke, but fortunately it didn't. The membrane
allowed water through and blocked gold nanoparticles
that were just a bit larger than the nanotube pores.”
Simulations
of gas and water transport through carbon nanotubes
predict that each should flow rapidly. Gas molecules
should bounce off its atomically smooth surface
like billiard balls. Water molecules should slide
through either because of the “slipperiness” of
the carbon nanotube surface or due to molecular ordering
induced by spatial confinement. The experiments performed
by the LLNL team demonstrated these predicted rapid
flows of gas and water through carbon nanotubes,
but further research is needed to determine the exact
transport mechanisms.
Another
potential application for the membranes is in gas separation.
The high gas permeability and its affinity to hydrocarbons
may allow for lower-energy, industrial-gas separations. “Though our membranes have
an order of magnitude smaller pore size, the enhanced
flow rate per pore and the high pore density makes
them superior in both air and water permeability compared
to conventional polycarbonate membranes,” Bakajin said. The research appears on the cover of the May
19 edition of the journal Science . Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has a mission to ensure
national security and apply science and technology to the important issues
of our time. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by the University
of California for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security
Administration.
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