Designing Carbon Nanotube Membranes for Efficient Water Desalination

Ben Corry Ben Corry
2007 The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 995 citations

Abstract

The transport of water and ions through membranes formed from carbon nanotubes ranging in diameter from 6 to 11 A is studied using molecular dynamics simulations under hydrostatic pressure and equilibrium conditions. Membranes incorporating carbon nanotubes are found to be promising candidates for water desalination using reverse osmosis, and the size and uniformity of tubes that is required to achieve a desired salt rejection is determined. By calculating the potential of mean force for ion and water translocation, we show that ions face a large energy barrier and will not pass through the narrower tubes studied ((5,5) and (6,6) "armchair" type tubes) but can pass through the wider (7,7) and (8,8) nanotubes. Water, however, faces no such impediment due to the formation of stable hydrogen bonds and crosses all of the tubes studied at very large rates. By measuring this conduction rate under a hydrostatic pressure difference, we show that membranes incorporating carbon nanotubes can, in principle, achieve a high degree of desalination at flow rates far in excess of existing membranes.

Keywords

DesalinationMembraneCarbon nanotubeMaterials scienceChemical engineeringReverse osmosisIonHydrostatic pressureCarbon fibersNanotechnologyChemical physicsChemistryThermodynamicsComposite materialOrganic chemistry

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
112
Issue
5
Pages
1427-1434
Citations
995
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

995
OpenAlex

Cite This

Ben Corry (2007). Designing Carbon Nanotube Membranes for Efficient Water Desalination. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B , 112 (5) , 1427-1434. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp709845u

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/jp709845u