Abstract

By virtue of its single-layer thickness, nanoscale incisions and flexible structure, graphene kirigami (GK) owns a great prospect to be an ultra-permeable membrane for separation engineering. However, the difficulty in creating nanoscale incisions has prevented GK from being considered as a membrane candidate in the past. This situation has been improved recently by some emerging kirigami-inspired synthetic strategies and techniques for constructing complex three-dimensional nanostructures. Here, we reveal the potential fabrication of nano-incised GK membranes via an innovative selective tearing method using molecular dynamics simulation. The results exhibit that through the selective tearing method, the periodic wrinkles could be generated on the defective graphene, contributing to the stress concentration around the defects and causing the CC bonds to break, finally forming nano-incisions. The initial defective graphene, including its size, defects density, parallelogram angle and aspect ratio, as well as the shear angle, are crucial to the incision distribution on the formed GK-like membrane after selecting tearing treatment. The desalination simulation demonstrates that the selective tearing formed graphene kirigami (STGK) membrane has ultra-high water permeability, achieving 1197 L/m2/h/bar with 100 % salt rejection, 5.2–6.3 times higher than the previously reported nanoporous graphene and more than two orders of magnitude higher than current reverse osmosis membranes. We expect this work will inspire the next-generation membranes for separation and purification technology.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call