Abstract
Nanofiltration technology faces the competing challenges of achieving high fluid flux through uniformly narrow pores of a mechanically and chemically stable filter. Supported dense-packed 2D-crystals of single-walled carbon nanotube (CNT) porins with ∼1 nm wide pores could, in principle, meet these challenges. However, such CNT membranes cannot currently be synthesized at high pore density. Here, we use computer simulations to explore lipid-mediated self-assembly as a route toward densely packed CNT membranes, motivated by the analogy to membrane-protein 2D crystallization. In large-scale coarse-grained molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we find that CNTs in lipid membranes readily self-assemble into large clusters. Lipids trapped between the CNTs lubricate CNT repacking upon collisions of diffusing clusters, thereby facilitating the formation of large ordered structures. Cluster diffusion follows the Saffman-Delbrück law and its generalization by Hughes, Pailthorpe, and White. On longer time scales, we expect the formation of close-packed CNT structures by depletion of the intervening shared annular lipid shell, depending on the relative strength of CNT-CNT and CNT-lipid interactions. Our simulations identify CNT length, diameter, and end functionalization as major factors for the self-assembly of CNT membranes.
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