TY - JOUR
T1 - Anomalous ionic transport in tunable angstrom-size water films on silica
AU - Allemand, Aymeric
AU - Zhao, Menghua
AU - Vincent, Olivier
AU - Fulcrand, Remy
AU - Joly, Laurent
AU - Ybert, Christophe
AU - Biance, Anne Laure
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 the Author(s).
PY - 2023/6/20
Y1 - 2023/6/20
N2 - Liquid and ionic transport through nanometric structures is central to many phenomena, ranging from cellular exchanges to water resource management or green energy conversion. While pushing down toward molecular scales progressively unveils novel transport behaviors, reaching ultimate confinement in controlled systems remains challenging and has often involved 2D Van der Waals materials. Here, we propose an alternative route which circumvents demanding nanofabrication steps, partially releases material constraints, and offers continuously tunable molecular confinement. This softmatter-inspired approach is based on the spontaneous formation of a molecularly thin liquid film onto fully wettable substrates in contact with the vapor phase of the liquid. Using silicon dioxide substrates, water films ranging from angstrom to nanometric thicknesses are formed in this manner, and ionic transport within the film can then be measured. Performing conductance measurements as a function of confinement in these ultimate regimes reveals a one-molecule thick layer of fully hindered transport nearby the silica, above which continuum, bulk-like approaches account for experimental results. Overall, this work paves the way for future investigations of molecular scale nanofluidics and provides insights into ionic transport nearby high surface energy materials such as natural rocks and clays, building concretes, or nanoscale silica membranes used for separation and filtering.
AB - Liquid and ionic transport through nanometric structures is central to many phenomena, ranging from cellular exchanges to water resource management or green energy conversion. While pushing down toward molecular scales progressively unveils novel transport behaviors, reaching ultimate confinement in controlled systems remains challenging and has often involved 2D Van der Waals materials. Here, we propose an alternative route which circumvents demanding nanofabrication steps, partially releases material constraints, and offers continuously tunable molecular confinement. This softmatter-inspired approach is based on the spontaneous formation of a molecularly thin liquid film onto fully wettable substrates in contact with the vapor phase of the liquid. Using silicon dioxide substrates, water films ranging from angstrom to nanometric thicknesses are formed in this manner, and ionic transport within the film can then be measured. Performing conductance measurements as a function of confinement in these ultimate regimes reveals a one-molecule thick layer of fully hindered transport nearby the silica, above which continuum, bulk-like approaches account for experimental results. Overall, this work paves the way for future investigations of molecular scale nanofluidics and provides insights into ionic transport nearby high surface energy materials such as natural rocks and clays, building concretes, or nanoscale silica membranes used for separation and filtering.
KW - Liquid film
KW - ionic transport
KW - nanofluidics
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2221304120
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2221304120
M3 - Article
C2 - 37307490
AN - SCOPUS:85163172372
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 120
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 25
M1 - e2221304120
ER -