Overlimiting current in non-uniform arrays of microchannels
ORAL
Abstract
Overlimiting current (OLC) through electrolytes interfaced with perm-selective membranes has been extensively researched in recent years. Identified mechanisms responsible for OLC include surface conduction (SC), convection by electro-osmotic flow (EOF), and electro-osmotic instability (EOI). In each system the dominant mechanism depends on input parameters such as surface charge and geometric constrictions. This work studies how a network of microchannels in a non-uniform array can induce OLC. To this end, micro/nanofluidic devices were fabricated with arrays of parallel microchannels with either uniform or non-uniform size distributions. All cases maintained the same fixed surface and bulk conduction. The current-voltage measurement demonstrated that OLC increased with increasing size non-uniformity up to a certain threshold. A visualization of internal flows indicates that parallel channels with non-uniform size induce flow loops across the network enhancing advective transport. These results can provide an understanding about ion transport in natural micro/nanoporous materials with random geometric structures.
*Basic Research Laboratory Project (NRF-2018R1A4A1022513) by the Ministry of Science and ICT, Korea, BK21 plus program in SNU and LG Yonam Foundation of Korea.
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Presenters
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Hyekyung Lee
- Seoul National Univ