Transport of a liquid water and methanol mixture through carbon nanotubes under a chemical potential gradient

Jie Zheng, Erin M. Lennon, Heng Kwong Tsao, Yu Jane Sheng, Shaoyi Jiang

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Abstract

In this work, we report a dual-control-volume grand canonical molecular dynamics simulation study of the transport of a water and methanol mixture under a fixed concentration gradient through nanotubes of various diameters and surface chemistries. Methanol and water are selected as fluid molecules since water represents a strongly polar molecule while methanol is intermediate between nonpolar and strongly polar molecules. Carboxyl acid (-COOH) groups are anchored onto the inner wall of a carbon nanotube to alter the hydrophobic surface into a hydrophilic one. Results show that the transport of the mixture through hydrophilic tubes is faster than through hydrophobic nanotubes although the diffusion of the mixture is slower inside hydrophilic than hydrophobic pores due to a hydrogen network. Thus, the transport of the liquid mixture through the nanotubes is controlled by the pore entrance effect for which hydrogen bonding plays an important role.

Original languageEnglish
Article number214702
JournalJournal of Chemical Physics
Volume122
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2005

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