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Effect of Anion Species on Ion Current Rectification Properties of Positively Charged Nanochannels

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 14:32 authored by Chen ZhaoChen Zhao, Huacheng ZhangHuacheng Zhang, Jue Hou, Ranwen Ou, Yinlong Zhu, Xingya Li, Lei Jiang, Huanting Wang
Biological ion channels can realize delicate mass transport under complicated physiological conditions. Artificial nanochannels can achieve biomimetic ion current rectification (ICR), gating, and selectivity that are mostly performed in pure salt solutions. Synthetic nanochannels that can function under mixed ion systems are highly desirable, yet their performances are hard to be compared to those under pure systems. Seeking out the potential reasons by investigating the effect of mixed-system components on the ion-transport properties of the constructed nanochannels seems necessary and important. Herein, we report the effect of anions with different charges and sizes on the ICR properties of positively charged nanochannels. Among the investigated anions, the low-valent anions showed no impact on the ICR direction, while the high-valent component ferrocyanide [Fe(CN)64-] caused significant ICR inversion. The ICR inversion mechanism is evidenced to result from the adsorption of Fe(CN)64-induced surface charge reversal, which relates to solution concentration, pH conditions, and nanochannel sizes and applies to both aminated and quaternized nanochannels that are positively charged. Noticeably, Fe(CN)64- is found to interfere with the transport of protein molecules in the nanochannel. This work points out that the ion species from mixed systems would potentially impact the intrinsic ICR properties of the nanochannels. Replacing highly charged counterions with organic components would be promising in building up future nanochannel-based mass transport systems running under mixed systems.

Funding

Self-gating nanochannels for nanofluidic applications

Australian Research Council

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Structurally-bridged crystalline molecular sieve-polymer membranes

Australian Research Council

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Engineered ion channels for selective and switchable ion conduction

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Volume

12

Issue

25

Start page

28915

End page

28922

Total pages

8

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020 American Chemical Society.

Former Identifier

2006104917

Esploro creation date

2021-04-21