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Cited 2 time in webofscience Cited 3 time in scopus
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Potential-induced wetting and dewetting in pH-responsive block copolymer membranes for mass transport control

Authors
Kwon, Seung-RyongBaek, SeolBohn, Paul W.
Issue Date
5-Apr-2022
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Citation
FARADAY DISCUSSIONS, v.233, no.0, pp.283 - 294
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
FARADAY DISCUSSIONS
Volume
233
Number
0
Start Page
283
End Page
294
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gnu/handle/sw.gnu/1394
DOI
10.1039/d1fd00048a
ISSN
1359-6640
Abstract
Wetting and dewetting behavior in channel-confined hydrophobic volumes is used in biological membranes to effect selective ion/molecular transport. Artificial biomimetic hydrophobic nanopores have been devised utilizing wetting and dewetting, however, tunable mass transport control utilizing multiple transport modes is required for applications such as controllable release/transport, water separation/purification and energy conversion. Here, we investigate the potential-induced wetting and dewetting behavior in a pH-responsive membrane composed of a polystyrene-b-poly(4-vinylpyridine) (PS-b-P4VP) block copolymer (BCP) when fabricated as a hierarchically-organized sandwich structure on a nanopore electrode array (NEA), i.e. BCP@NEA. At pH < pK(a)(P4VP) (pK(a) similar to 4.8), the BCP acts as an anion-exchange membrane due to the hydrophilic, protonated P4VP cylindrical nanodomains, but at pH > pK(a)(P4VP), the P4VP domains exhibit charge-neutral, hydrophobic and collapsed structures, blocking mass transport via the hydrophobic membrane. However, when originally prepared in a dewetted condition, mass transport in the BCP membrane may be switched on if sufficiently negative potentials are applied to the BCP@NEA architecture. When the hydrophobic BCP membrane is introduced on top of 2-electrode-embedded nanopore arrays, electrolyte solution in the nanopores is introduced, then isolated, by exploiting the potential-induced wetting and dewetting transitions in the BCP membrane. The potential-induced wetting/dewetting transition and the effect on cyclic voltammetry in the BCP@NEA structures is characterized as a function of the potential, pH and ionic strength. In addition, chronoamperometry and redox cycling experiments are used to further characterize the potential response. The multi-modal mass transport system proposed in this work will be useful for ultrasensitive sensing and single-molecule studies, which require long-time monitoring to explore reaction dynamics as well as molecular heterogeneity in nanoconfined volumes.
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