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From radial to unidirectional water pumping in zeta-potential modulated Nafion nanostructures

Nature Communications 2022 30 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jordi Fraxedas, M.J. Esplandiu M.J. Esplandiu David Reguera, David Reguera, David Reguera, Daniel Romero-Guzmán, M.J. Esplandiu Daniel Romero-Guzmán, Amparo M. Gallardo‐Moreno, Amparo M. Gallardo‐Moreno, Jordi Fraxedas, Jordi Fraxedas, Jordi Fraxedas, M.J. Esplandiu

Summary

Researchers developed a self-powered water pump made from Nafion polymer that uses dissolved salts — including toxic cadmium — as fuel to drive fluid movement, demonstrating that nanostructuring the material can switch flows from spreading outward to moving in a single direction, with potential for water purification applications.

Chemically propelled micropumps are promising wireless systems to autonomously drive fluid flows for many applications. However, many of these systems are activated by nocuous chemical fuels, cannot operate at high salt concentrations, or have difficulty for controlling flow directionality. In this work we report on a self-driven polymer micropump fueled by salt which can trigger both radial and unidirectional fluid flows. The micropump is based on the cation-exchanger Nafion, which produces chemical gradients and local electric fields capable to trigger interfacial electroosmotic flows. Unidirectional pumping is predicted by simulations and achieved experimentally by nanostructuring Nafion into microarrays with a fine tune modulation of surrounding surface zeta potentials. Nafion micropumps work in a wide range of salt concentrations, are reusable, and can be fueled by different salt cations. We demonstrate that they work with the common water-contaminant cadmium, using the own capture of this ion as fuel to drive fluid pumping. Thus, this system has potential for efficient and fast water purification strategies for environmental remediation. Unidirectional Nafion pumps also hold promise for effective analyte delivery or preconcentration for (bio)sensing assays.

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