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Electrochemical-repaired porous graphene membranes for precise ion-ion separation

  • Zongyao Zhou
  • , Kangning Zhao
  • , Heng Yu Chi
  • , Yueqing Shen
  • , Shuqing Song
  • , Kuang Jung Hsu
  • , Mojtaba Chevalier
  • , Wenxiong Shi
  • , Kumar Varoon Agrawal*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne
  • School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology
  • Tianjin University of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The preparation of atom-thick porous lattice hosting Å-scale pores is attractive to achieve a large ion-ion selectivity in combination with a large ion flux. Graphene film is an ideal selective layer for this if high-precision pores can be incorporated, however, it is challenging to avoid larger non-selective pores at the tail-end of the pore size distribution which reduces ion-ion selectivity. Herein, we develop a strategy to overcome this challenge using an electrochemical repair strategy that successfully masks larger pores in large-area graphene. 10-nm-thick electropolymerized conjugated microporous polymer (CMP) layer is successfully deposited on graphene, thanks to a strong π-π interaction in these two materials. While the CMP layer itself is not selective, it effectively masks graphene pores, leading to a large Li+/Mg2+ selectivity from zero-dimensional pores reaching 300 with a high Li+ ion permeation rate surpassing the performance of reported materials for ion-ion separation. Overall, this scalable repair strategy enables the fabrication of monolayer graphene membranes with customizable pore sizes, limiting the contribution of nonselective pores, and offering graphene membranes a versatile platform for a broad spectrum of challenging separations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4006
JournalNature Communications
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024
Externally publishedYes

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