Abstract

To examine electrostatic effects on the diffusion of macromolecules in membranes, diffusivities of narrow molecular-size fractions of the polyelectrolytes ficoll sulfate and dextran sulfate were measured in polycarbonate track-etch membranes. Radius, number density, and surface charge density of membrane pores were determined from a combination of hydraulic permeability, glucose diffusion, and streaming potential measurements. Molecular charge and Stokes—Einstein radius for each macromolecule fraction were determined from free-solution electrophoretic mobility and diffusivity in a large pore radius membrane, D∞, respectively. As ionic strength was increased from 0.005 to 0.1 M, D∞ for ficoll sulfate remained constant while D∞ for dextran sulfate increased slightly (15-18%). Macromolecule diffusivities in small pore membranes, D, were much more sensitive to ionic strength. For membranes where the ratio of Stokes—Einstein radius to pore radius ranged from 0.08 to 0.29, D/D∞ for ficoll sulfate and dextran sulfate increased by factors ranging from 2.5 to 14 for the same increase in ionic strength. Recent theoretical results for electrostatic double layer interactions in hindered diffusion are in good quantitative agreement with these findings.

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