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      Thermal dependence of nanofluidic energy conversion by reverse electrodialysis

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          Abstract

          When the temperature and ion concentration are very high, hydrophobic patches grow owing to extraction of gases from the solution.

          Abstract

          The thermal dependence of salinity-gradient-driven energy conversion by reverse electrodialysis using a mesoporous silica thin film with pores ca. 2–3 nm in diameter was studied in a temperature range of 293–333 K. As the temperature increases, the surface charge density of mesopores increases owing to an increase in the zeta potential of the pore walls, which in turn increases the concentration of counter-ions in the electrical double layer. The ion mobility also increases with increasing temperature owing to a decrease in the liquid viscosity. As a result, the temperature increase improves the ion conductance of mesopores both in the surface-charge-governed regime at low ion concentrations and in the bulk regime at high ion concentrations. However, further increases in temperature induce bubble nucleation. In particular, in highly concentrated salt solutions, hydrophobic patches appear on the pore surfaces because of the salting-out effect and mask the surface charge. The weakened polarity in mesopores allows more co-ions to enter them, decreasing the potential difference across the film, resulting in a serious deterioration of the energy conversion efficiency. The thermal dependence of the performance characteristics of mesoporous-silica-based nanofluidic devices was also evaluated.

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          Transport phenomena in nanofluidics

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            Giant osmotic energy conversion measured in a single transmembrane boron nitride nanotube.

            New models of fluid transport are expected to emerge from the confinement of liquids at the nanoscale, with potential applications in ultrafiltration, desalination and energy conversion. Nevertheless, advancing our fundamental understanding of fluid transport on the smallest scales requires mass and ion dynamics to be ultimately characterized across an individual channel to avoid averaging over many pores. A major challenge for nanofluidics thus lies in building distinct and well-controlled nanochannels, amenable to the systematic exploration of their properties. Here we describe the fabrication and use of a hierarchical nanofluidic device made of a boron nitride nanotube that pierces an ultrathin membrane and connects two fluid reservoirs. Such a transmembrane geometry allows the detailed study of fluidic transport through a single nanotube under diverse forces, including electric fields, pressure drops and chemical gradients. Using this device, we discover very large, osmotically induced electric currents generated by salinity gradients, exceeding by two orders of magnitude their pressure-driven counterpart. We show that this result originates in the anomalously high surface charge carried by the nanotube's internal surface in water at large pH, which we independently quantify in conductance measurements. The nano-assembly route using nanostructures as building blocks opens the way to studying fluid, ionic and molecule transport on the nanoscale, and may lead to biomimetic functionalities. Our results furthermore suggest that boron nitride nanotubes could be used as membranes for osmotic power harvesting under salinity gradients.
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              Thermodynamics of electrolytes. I. Theoretical basis and general equations

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                NANOHL
                Nanoscale
                Nanoscale
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2040-3364
                2040-3372
                2017
                2017
                : 9
                : 33
                : 12068-12076
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Mechanical Engineering
                [2 ]Graduate School of Engineering
                [3 ]The University of Tokyo
                [4 ]Tokyo 113-8656
                [5 ]Japan
                [6 ]National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
                [7 ]Tsukuba
                Article
                10.1039/C7NR04387B
                28799599
                9ab54945-46b6-4a86-ad7f-89cf6eb5b26a
                © 2017
                History

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