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Facile Size-Selective Defect Sealing in Large-Area Atomically Thin Graphene Membranes for Sub-Nanometer Scale Separations...

by Peifu Cheng, Wonhee Ko, An-ping Li, Juan C Idrobo Tapia, Piran Kidambi
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Nano Letters
Publication Date
Volume
TBD
Issue
TBD

Atomically thin graphene with a high-density of precise subnanometer pores represents the ideal membrane for ionic and molecular separations. However, a single large-nanopore can severely compromise membrane performance and differential etching between pre-existing defects/grain boundaries in graphene and pristine regions presents fundamental limitations. Here, we show for the first time that size-selective interfacial polymerization after high-density nanopore formation in graphene not only seals larger defects (>0.5 nm) and macroscopic tears but also successfully preserves the smaller subnanometer pores. Low-temperature growth followed by mild UV/ozone oxidation allows for facile and scalable formation of high-density (4–5.5 × 1012 cm–2) useful subnanometer pores in the graphene lattice. We demonstrate scalable synthesis of fully functional centimeter-scale nanoporous atomically thin membranes (NATMs) with water (∼0.28 nm) permeance ∼23× higher than commercially available membranes and excellent rejection to salt ions (∼0.66 nm, >97% rejection) as well as small organic molecules (∼0.7–1.5 nm, ∼100% rejection) under forward osmosis.