Abstract
Narrow carbon nanotubes (nCNT) are unique mimics of biological channels with water-ion selectivity attractive for applications such as water purification and osmotic energy harvesting, yet their understanding is still incomplete. Here, an ab initio computation is employed to develop the full picture of ion transfer in nCNT including specificity and coupling between ions. The thermodynamic costs of ion transfer are computed for single ions and ion pairs and used to evaluate different local coupling scenarios including strong (pairing) and weak (free-ion) coupling as well as "electroneutrality breakdown" (EB), possible for cations only due to their chemisorption-like interaction with nCNT. The results also indicate that nCNT behaves as a highly polarizable metal-like shell, which eliminates the dielectric energy when CNT accommodates coupled cation and anion. This allows facile computation and comparison of the full transfer costs, including translation entropy, for different ions in different coupling modes to identify the dominant regime. EB transfer appears most favorable for K+, while anions strongly favor transfer as pairs, except for chloride which favors weak coupling and, at neutral pH, transfers as a trace ion coupled to both cation and OH-. The results demonstrate that, in general, observed ion permeation and conduction in nCNT, especially for anions, reflect a complex ion-specific and composition-dependent interplay between different ions.
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