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Designing artificial ion channels with strict K(+)/Na(+) selectivity toward next-generation electric-eel-mimetic ionic power generation

A biological potassium channel is >1000 times more permeable to K(+) than to Na(+) and exhibits a giant permeation rate of ∼10(8) ions/s. It is a great challenge to construct artificial potassium channels with such high selectivity and ion conduction rate. Herein, we unveil a long-overlooked stru...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Li, Jipeng, Du, Linhan, Kong, Xian, Wu, Jianzhong, Lu, Diannan, Jiang, Lei, Guo, Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10632797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37954195
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwad260
Descripción
Sumario:A biological potassium channel is >1000 times more permeable to K(+) than to Na(+) and exhibits a giant permeation rate of ∼10(8) ions/s. It is a great challenge to construct artificial potassium channels with such high selectivity and ion conduction rate. Herein, we unveil a long-overlooked structural feature that underpins the ultra-high K(+)/Na(+) selectivity. By carrying out massive molecular dynamics simulation for ion transport through carbonyl-oxygen-modified bi-layer graphene nanopores, we find that the twisted carbonyl rings enable strict potassium selectivity with a dynamic K(+)/Na(+) selectivity ratio of 1295 and a K(+) conduction rate of 3.5 × 10(7) ions/s, approaching those of the biological counterparts. Intriguingly, atomic trajectories of K(+) permeation events suggest a dual-ion transport mode, i.e. two like-charged potassium ions are successively captured by the nanopores in the graphene bi-layer and are interconnected by sharing one or two interlayer water molecules. The dual-ion behavior allows rapid release of the exiting potassium ion via a soft knock-on mechanism, which has previously been found only in biological ion channels. As a proof-of-concept utilization of this discovery, we propose a novel way for ionic power generation by mixing KCl and NaCl solutions through the bi-layer graphene nanopores, termed potassium-permselectivity enabled osmotic power generation (PoPee-OPG). Theoretically, the biomimetic device achieves a very high power density of >1000 W/m(2) with graphene sheets of <1% porosity. This study provides a blueprint for artificial potassium channels and thus paves the way toward next-generation electric-eel-mimetic ionic power generation.