Large-area, self-healing block copolymer membranes for energy conversion

Christian C. M. Sproncken, Peng Liu, Justin Monney, William S. Fall, Carolina Pierucci, Philip B. V. Scholten, Brian Van Bueren, Marcos Penedo, Georg Ernest Fantner, Henricus H. Wensink, Ullrich Steiner, Christoph Weder, Nico Bruns, Michael Mayer, Alessandro Ianiro

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Membranes are widely used for separation processes in applications such as water desalination, batteries and dialysis, and are crucial in key sectors of our economy and society 1. The majority of technologically exploited membranes are based on solid polymers and function as passive barriers, whose transport characteristics are governed by their chemical composition and nanostructure. Although such membranes are ubiquitous, it has proved challenging to maximize selectivity and permeability independently, leading to trade-offs between these pertinent characteristics 2. Self-assembled biological membranes, in which barrier and transport functions are decoupled 3,4, provide the inspiration to address this problem 5,6. Here we introduce a self-assembly strategy that uses the interface of an aqueous two-phase system to template and stabilize molecularly thin (approximately 35 nm) biomimetic block copolymer bilayers of scalable area that can exceed 10 cm 2 without defects. These membranes are self-healing, and their barrier function against the passage of ions (specific resistance of approximately 1 MΩ cm 2) approaches that of phospholipid membranes. The fluidity of these membranes enables straightforward functionalization with molecular carriers that shuttle potassium ions down a concentration gradient with exquisite selectivity over sodium ions. This ion selectivity enables the generation of electric power from equimolar solutions of NaCl and KCl in devices that mimic the electric organ of electric rays.

Original languageEnglish
Article number12
Pages (from-to)866-871
Number of pages6
JournalNature
Volume630
Issue number8018
Early online date5 Jun 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Jun 2024

Funding

This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation through the National Center of Competence in Research Bio-Inspired Materials (grant no. 182881); by the Pathfinder Open project INTEGRATE (grant no. 101046333) cofinanced by the European Innovation Council and the Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation; and by the Adolphe Merkle Foundation. CGMD simulations were performed using HPC resources from GENCI-IDRIS (grant no. 2022-A0130913823). M.P. was supported by the H2020 \u2013 EU Framework Programme for Research & Innovation (2014\u20132020), ERC-2017-CoG, InCell, project no. 773091. We thank P. Molet Bachs for help with the computer-aided drawings of membrane formation vessels. W.S.F. thanks J. Baschnagel and H. Meyer for helpful discussions and comments on manuscript preparation.

Keywords

  • molecular self-assembly
  • membranes
  • energy conversion

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