posted on 2016-10-18, 00:00authored byMinseon Byeon, Jae-Sung Bae, Seongjin Park, Yun Hee Jang, Ji-Woong Park
The
porin pores of biological cell membranes enable molecules to
be sieved out selectively while water molecules traverse the channel
in a single file. Imitating this streaming mechanism is a promising
way to create artificial liquid-sieving membranes, but ultrathin molecular
pores need to be produced in a large membrane format to be functional
under high transmembrane pressures. Here we show that a membrane composed
of a covalent molecular mesh can filter mixtures of small molecules
in a liquid by the porin-like mechanism. Tetrahedral network formers
are polymerized layer-by-layer on a nanoporous substrate to yield
a thin layer of a covalent molecular network containing an array of
molecular meshes grown by a pore-limited mechanism. Each of the meshes
exhibits high water permeability, estimated to be greater than 2500
Lm<sup>–2</sup> h<sup>–1</sup>. Glucose or larger molecules
are selectively sieved out while the solvent and solutes smaller than
glucose traverse the mesh.