Abstract
Fundamental understanding of ionic transport at the nanoscale is essential for developing biosensors based on nanopore technology and new generation high-performance nanofiltration membranes for separation and purification applications. We study here ionic transport through single putatively neutral hydrophobic nanopores with high aspect ratio (of length L=6μm with diameters ranging from 1 to 10nm) and with a well controlled cylindrical geometry. We develop a detailed hybrid mesoscopic theoretical approach for the electrolyte conductivity inside nanopores, which considers explicitly ion advection by electro-osmotic flow and possible flow slip at the pore surface. By fitting the experimental conductance data we show that for nanopore diameters greater than 4nm a constant weak surface charge density of about 10-2 Cm-2 needs to be incorporated in the model to account for conductance plateaus of a few pico-siemens at low salt concentrations. For tighter nanopores, our analysis leads to a higher surface charge density, which can be attributed to a modification of ion solvation structure close to the pore surface, as observed in the molecular dynamics simulations we performed.
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CITATION STYLE
Balme, S., Picaud, F., Manghi, M., Palmeri, J., Bechelany, M., Cabello-Aguilar, S., … Janot, J. M. (2015). Ionic transport through sub-10nm diameter hydrophobic high-aspect ratio nanopores: Experiment, theory and simulation. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep10135
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