posted on 2022-03-08, 23:29authored byXinke Zhang, Yuzhen Liu, Jiaye Su
Understanding the electroosmotic
flow through a nanochannel is
essential to the design of novel nanofluidic devices, ranging from
desalination to nanometer water pumps. Nonetheless, the competition
between cation and anion in electric fields inevitably leads to a
limited pumping of water, and thus weakening their competition could
be a new avenue for the fundamental control of water transport. In
this work, through a series of molecular dynamics simulations, we
find a surprising phenomenon in which under the drive of a traditional
longitudinal electric field, an additional lateral electric field
can significantly weaken the competitive transport of a cation and
anion through a carbon nanotube, which spontaneously leads to a massive
increase in electroosmotic water flux. Specifically, with the increase
in the lateral electric field, the anion flux exhibits an almost linear
reduction, and the cation flux is stable and can even be enhanced.
As a result, the net water flux along the cation direction increases
significantly. The key to this unexpected phenomenon lies in the size
and mobility difference between the cation and anion. The anion is
larger and has greater mobility and is thus more susceptible to the
lateral electric field, which ultimately leads to the reduction of
its flux. For different ion types and CNT lengths, we can observe
similar electropumping phenomenon, where the friction force induced
by the lateral electric field becomes nontrivial for long CNTs. Our
results provide a new route to tune the competitive transport of cations
and anions and should be useful for the design of novel electroosmotic
pumps.