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Light‐Powered Directional Nanofluidic Ion Transport in Kirigami‐Made Asymmetric Photonic‐Ionic Devices
Author(s) -
Jia Meijuan,
Kong Xian,
Wang Lili,
Zhang Yanbing,
Quan Di,
Ding Liping,
Lu Diannan,
Jiang Lei,
Guo Wei
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
small
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.785
H-Index - 236
eISSN - 1613-6829
pISSN - 1613-6810
DOI - 10.1002/smll.201905557
Subject(s) - materials science , nanotechnology , ionic bonding , graphene , optoelectronics , photonics , ion , ion transporter , oxide , fabrication , nanofluidics , nanopore , chemistry , medicine , alternative medicine , organic chemistry , pathology , metallurgy
Nacre‐mimetic 2D nanofluidic materials with densely packed sub‐nanometer‐height lamellar channels find widespread applications in water‐, energy‐, and environment‐related aspects by virtue of their scalable fabrication methods and exceptional transport properties. Recently, light‐powered nanofluidic ion transport in synthetic materials gained considerable attention for its remote, noninvasive, and active control of the membrane transport property using the energy of light. Toward practical application, a critical challenge is to overcome the dependence on inhomogeneous or site‐specific light illumination. Here, asymmetric photonic‐ionic devices based on kirigami‐tailored graphene oxide paper are fabricated, and directional nanofluidic ion transport properties therein powered by full‐area light illumination are demonstrated. The in‐plane asymmetry of the graphene oxide paper is essential to the generation of photoelectric driving force under homogeneous illumination. This light‐powered ion transport phenomenon is explained based on a modified carrier diffusion model. In asymmetric nanofluidic structures, enhanced recombination of photoexcited charge carriers at the membrane boundary breaks the electric potential balance in the horizontal direction, and thus drives the ion transport in that direction under symmetric illumination. The kirigami‐based strategy provides a facile and scalable way to fabricate paper‐like photonic‐ionic devices with arbitrary shapes, working as fundamental elements for large‐scale light‐harvesting nanofluidic circuits.