Issue 20, 2019

Voltage gated inter-cation selective ion channels from graphene nanopores

Abstract

With the ability to selectively control ionic flux, biological protein ion channels perform a fundamental role in many physiological processes. For practical applications that require the functionality of a biological ion channel, graphene provides a promising solid-state alternative, due to its atomic thinness and mechanical strength. Here, we demonstrate that nanopores introduced into graphene membranes, as large as 50 nm in diameter, exhibit inter-cation selectivity with a ∼20× preference for K+ over divalent cations and can be modulated by an applied gate voltage. Liquid atomic force microscopy of the graphene devices reveals surface nanobubbles near the pore to be responsible for the observed selective behavior. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that translocation of ions across the pore likely occurs via a thin water layer at the edge of the pore and the nanobubble. Our results demonstrate a significant improvement in the inter-cation selectivity displayed by a solid-state nanopore device and by utilizing the pores in a de-wetted state, offers an approach to fabricate selective graphene membranes that does not rely on the fabrication of sub-nm pores.

Graphical abstract: Voltage gated inter-cation selective ion channels from graphene nanopores

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
22 Dec 2018
Accepted
04 May 2019
First published
06 May 2019

Nanoscale, 2019,11, 9856-9861

Author version available

Voltage gated inter-cation selective ion channels from graphene nanopores

L. Cantley, J. L. Swett, D. Lloyd, D. A. Cullen, K. Zhou, P. V. Bedworth, S. Heise, A. J. Rondinone, Z. Xu, S. Sinton and J. S. Bunch, Nanoscale, 2019, 11, 9856 DOI: 10.1039/C8NR10360G

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