Selective Nanoscale Mass Transport across Atomically Thin Single Crystalline Graphene Membranes

  • Piran R. Kidambi
  • , Michael S.H. Boutilier
  • , Luda Wang
  • , Doojoon Jang
  • , Jeehwan Kim
  • , Rohit Karnik

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

Atomically thin single crystals, without grain boundaries and associated defect clusters, represent ideal systems to study and understand intrinsic defects in materials, but probing them collectively over large area remains nontrivial. In this study, the authors probe nanoscale mass transport across large-area (≈0.2 cm2) single-crystalline graphene membranes. A novel, polymer-free picture frame assisted technique, coupled with a stress-inducing nickel layer is used to transfer single crystalline graphene grown on silicon carbide substrates to flexible polycarbonate track etched supports with well-defined cylindrical ≈200 nm pores. Diffusion-driven flow shows selective transport of ≈0.66 nm hydrated K+ and Cl ions over ≈1 nm sized small molecules, indicating the presence of selective sub-nanometer to nanometer sized defects. This work presents a framework to test the barrier properties and intrinsic quality of atomically thin materials at the sub-nanometer to nanometer scale over technologically relevant large areas, and suggests the potential use of intrinsic defects in atomically thin materials for molecular separations or desalting.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1605896
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume29
Issue number19
DOIs
StatePublished - 17 May 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • atomically thin membranes
  • selective transport
  • single crystalline graphene
  • sub-nanometer pores

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