Abstract

Nanoporous membranes provide an attractive approach for rapid filtering of nanoparticles at high-throughput volume, a goal useful to many fields of science and technology. Creating a device to readily separate different particles would require an extensive knowledge of particle-nanopore interactions and particle translocation dynamics. To this end, we use a multiscale model for the separation of nanoparticles by combining microscopic Brownian dynamics simulations to simulate the motion of spherical nanoparticles of various sizes and charges in a system with nanopores in an electrically biased membrane with a macroscopic filtration model accounting for bulk diffusion of nanoparticles and membrane surface pore density. We find that, in general, the separation of differently sized particles is easier to accomplish than of differently charged particles. The separation by charge can be better performed in systems with low pore density and/or smaller filtration chambers when electric nanopore-particle interactions are significant. The results from these simple cases can be used to gain insight in the more complex dynamics of separating, for example, globular proteins.

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