Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 40
    Citation - Scopus: 38
    Gas Permeation Through Graphdiyne-Based Nanoporous Membranes
    (Nature Research, 2022) Zhou, Zhihua; Tan, Yongtao; Yang, Qian; Bera, Achintya; Xiong, Zecheng; Yağmurcukardeş, Mehmet; Kim, Minsoo
    Nanoporous membranes based on two dimensional materials are predicted to provide highly selective gas transport in combination with extreme permeance. Here we investigate membranes made from multilayer graphdiyne, a graphene-like crystal with a larger unit cell. Despite being nearly a hundred of nanometers thick, the membranes allow fast, Knudsen-type permeation of light gases such as helium and hydrogen whereas heavy noble gases like xenon exhibit strongly suppressed flows. Using isotope and cryogenic temperature measurements, the seemingly conflicting characteristics are explained by a high density of straight-through holes (direct porosity of ∼0.1%), in which heavy atoms are adsorbed on the walls, partially blocking Knudsen flows. Our work offers important insights into intricate transport mechanisms playing a role at nanoscale.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 62
    Citation - Scopus: 59
    Exponentially Selective Molecular Sieving Through Angstrom Pores
    (Nature Publishing Group, 2021) Sun, Pengzhan; Yağmurcukardeş, Mehmet; Zhang, R.; Kuang, Wenjun; Lozada-Hidalgo, Marcelo; Liu, B. L.; Geim, Andre K.
    Two-dimensional crystals with angstrom-scale pores are widely considered as candidates for a next generation of molecular separation technologies aiming to provide extreme, exponentially large selectivity combined with high flow rates. No such pores have been demonstrated experimentally. Here we study gas transport through individual graphene pores created by low intensity exposure to low kV electrons. Helium and hydrogen permeate easily through these pores whereas larger species such as xenon and methane are practically blocked. Permeating gases experience activation barriers that increase quadratically with molecules’ kinetic diameter, and the effective diameter of the created pores is estimated as ∼2 angstroms, about one missing carbon ring. Our work reveals stringent conditions for achieving the long sought-after exponential selectivity using porous two-dimensional membranes and suggests limits on their possible performance.