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–2 h–1. Glucose or larger molecules
are selectively sieved out while the solvent and solutes smaller than
glucose traverse the mesh.