(261h) A Nature-Inspired Design of a Double-Layer Graphene Membrane Module for Potassium Ion Transport | AIChE

(261h) A Nature-Inspired Design of a Double-Layer Graphene Membrane Module for Potassium Ion Transport

Authors 

Liu, Z., Key Lab of Industrial Biocatalysis, Ministry of Education, Tsinghua University
Lu, D., Tsinghua University
Li, J., Hainan University
The nature-evolved protein KcsA transports potassium with not only a high-speed up to 108 ions/s, and, moreover, high selectivity in terms of K+/Na+ selectivity ratio up to 1000:1. The functional structure region (selective filter, SF) of KcsA is a four-layer cylindrical nanopore with a length of about 1.2 nm and an inner diameter of 0.3 nm, with a conserved sequence of TVGYG. Recently, we designed a graphene membrane module and demonstrated a solution-mixed power generation model that can obtain a power density of up to 1280 w/m2 by separating potassium ions from chloride ions in a solution with a porosity of less than 1%.

In this work, we proposed a carbonyl-modified double-layer graphene nanopore structure mimicking the SF region of the KcsA protein. Our results show that the four carbonyl-modified sites rotating between the double layers can achieve potassium ion selectivity, with a dynamic K+/Na+ selectivity ratio of up to 1295, and a potassium ion transport rate of 3.5 × 107 ions/s, which is close to that of the KcsA. Moreover, the simulation has shown a double-ion transfer mode of potassium ions, which reproduced the previously discovered knock-on mechanism. The present work offered a molecular insight of the biomimetic ion-selective nanostructures, which is helpful for the design and application of ion-selective membrane materials and modules.