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Graphene oxide membranes show exceptional molecular permeation properties, with a promise for many applications. However, their use in ion sieving and desalination technologies is limited by a permeation cutoff of ~9 Angstrom, which is larger than hydrated ion diameters for common salts. The cutoff is determined by the interlayer spacing d ~13.5 Angstrom, typical for graphene oxide laminates that swell in water. Achieving smaller d for the laminates immersed in water has proved to be a challenge.Here we describe how to control d by physical confinement and achieve accurate and tuneable ion sieving. Membranes with d from ~ 9.8 Angstrom to 6.4 Angstrom are demonstrated, providing the sieve size smaller than typical ions hydrated diameters.In this regime, ion permeation is found to be thermally activated with energy barriers of ~10-100 kJ/mol depending on d. Importantly, permeation rates decrease exponentially with decreasing the sieve size but water transport is weakly affected (by a factor of <2). The latter is attributed to a low barrier for water molecules entry and large slip lengths inside graphene capillaries. Building on these findings, we demonstrate a simple scalable method to obtain graphene-based membranes with limited swelling, which exhibit 97% rejection for NaCl.
There has been intense interest in filtration and separation properties of graphene-based materials that can have well-defined nanometer pores and exhibit low frictional water flow inside them. Here we investigate molecular permeation through graphen
Developing smart membranes that allow precise and reversible control of molecular permeation using external stimuli would be of intense interest for many areas of science: from physics and chemistry to life-sciences. In particular, electrical control
The interaction of graphene with neighboring materials and structures plays an important role in its behavior, both scientifically and technologically. The interactions are complicated due to the interplay between surface forces and possibly nonlinea
Water transport through graphene-derived membranes has gained much interest recently due to its promising potential in filtration and separation applications. In this work, we explore water permeation in graphene oxide membranes using atomistic simul
The ability to tune the optical response of a material via electrostatic gating is crucial for optoelectronic applications, such as electro-optic modulators, saturable absorbers, optical limiters, photodetectors and transparent electrodes. The band s