Abstract

A higher rectification degree in ionic diodes is required to achieve better performance in applications. Nonetheless, the active geometrical change that is critical for inducing electrical potential asymmetry is difficult to realize in typical ionic diodes because of the intrinsic limitation of the fabrication method. Here, we propose a nanochannel-network-based bipolar diode with a high rectification degree of ∼1600─the highest value realized until now, to the best of our knowledge. Such a high rectification is obtained based on the synergetic effect of the bipolar surface charge and the optimization of the microchannel through experimental studies and multiphysics numerical simulations. It induces ion concentrations at the heterogeneous junction based on the accumulation effect under the forward potential bias. In particular, this proposed molecular concentration occurs in the ohmic region without vortex and instability that is inevitable at the conventional nano-electrokinetic concentration. Combining this accumulation with the horizontally aligned configuration of the nanochannel network membrane (NCNM), a highly sensitive and quantitative mercury ion (Hg2+) sensor based on a fluorescent signal is fabricated that allows direct measurement using a general fluorescent microscope. The detection limit of Hg2+ is 10 pM, which is ∼10 times lower than the best detection limit realized so far (∼100 pM) in fluorescent dye-based detection. This demonstrates the potential of asymmetric NCNM for high-performance ion transport in applications such as energy conversion, based on its design and material flexibility.

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