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Department of Energy Science and Engineering
CMMM Lab(Curious Minds Molecular Modeling Laboratory)
1. Journal Articles
Sub-nanometer pore formation in single-molecule-thick polyurea molecular-sieving membrane: a computational study
Park, Seongjin
;
Lansac, Yves
;
Jang, Yun Hee
Department of Energy Science and Engineering
CMMM Lab(Curious Minds Molecular Modeling Laboratory)
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Sub-nanometer pore formation in single-molecule-thick polyurea molecular-sieving membrane: a computational study
DGIST Authors
Jang, Yun Hee
Issued Date
2018-06
Citation
Park, Seongjin. (2018-06). Sub-nanometer pore formation in single-molecule-thick polyurea molecular-sieving membrane: a computational study. doi: 10.1039/c8cp01580e
Type
Article
Article Type
Article
Subject
DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY
;
NANOPOROUS GRAPHENE
;
TRANSPORT MECHANISMS
;
FORCE-FIELD
;
MONTE-CARLO
;
SIMULATION
;
NANOTUBES
;
DIFFUSION
;
DYNAMICS
;
WATER
ISSN
1463-9076
Abstract
A polymeric network of 1-(4-tritylphenyl)urea (TPU) built via layer-by-layer cross-linking polymerization has been proposed to be an excellent mesh equipped with single-molecule-thick pores (i.e., cyclic poly-TPU rings), which can sieve glucose (∼0.7 nm) out of its mixture with urea for hemodialysis applications. Monte Carlo search for the lowest-energy conformation of various sizes of poly-TPU rings unravels the origin of narrow pore size distribution, which is around the sizes of dimer and trimer rings (0.3-0.8 nm). Flexible rings larger than the dimer and trimer rings, in particular tetramer rings, prefer a twisted conformation in the shape of the infinity symbol (∞, which looks like two dimer rings joined together) locked by a hydrogen bond between diphenylurea linker groups facing each other. Translocation energy profiles across these TPU rings reveal their urea-versus-glucose sieving mechanism: glucose is either too large (to enter dimers and twisted tetramers) or too perfectly fit (to exit trimers), leaving only a dimer-sized free space in the ring, whereas smaller-sized urea and water pass through these effective dimer-sized rings (bare dimers, twisted tetramers, and glucose-filled trimers) without encountering a substantial energy barrier or trap. © the Owner Societies 2018.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/9001
DOI
10.1039/c8cp01580e
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
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