Phys/ANE/ChemPhys Joint Seminar

Date
Wed, Sep 26, 2018 11:00 am - 12:00 pm
Location
Chem 0112 Marker Room

Description

Speaker: Aleksandr Noy, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Title: Molecular Transport and Nanoscale Confinement in Carbon Nanotube Porins

Abstract: Controlling ion and water transport on a molecular scale is important for
applications ranging from industrial water treatment, to membrane
separations, to bioelectronic interface design. Living systems move ions and
small molecules across biological membranes using protein pores that rely on
nanoscale confinement effects to achieve efficient and exquisitely-selective
transport. I will show that carbon nanotube porins—pore channels formed by
ultra-short carbon nanotubes assembled in a lipid membrane—can exploit
similar physical principles to transport water, protons, and small ions with
efficiency that rivals and sometimes exceeds that of biological channels. I will
discuss the role of molecular confinement in these pores and show how it can
enhance water and proton transport efficiency and influence the
mechanisms of ion selectivity in these pores. Overall, carbon nanotube porins
represent simple and versatile biomimetic membrane pores that are ideal for
studying nanoscale transport phenomena and building the next generation
of separation technologies and biointerfaces.