Filtering with mussel power

An “ion sieve” made of the material “polydopamine” could in future enable the production of efficient filters that can also filter according to chemical properties.
© Max-Planck-Institut für Polymerforschung

Nanomembrane allows efficient sieving of ions from liquids.

Filters play an important role in many areas of life – from coffee filters to the purification of liquids. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research have now produced a filter made of a novel, mussel-like material. The filter, which is only around 20 millionths of a millimeter thick, is able to filter ions and molecules with high efficiency.

Everyone knows it from their childhood days in the sandpit: sand is filtered using a sieve. Larger stones get stuck, while fine sand can fall through the sieve. The same principle is used when making coffee: water and aromatic substances can pass through unhindered, while the fine-grained coffee powder sticks to the coffee filter.

However, filtering purely by size is no longer sufficient for cleaning or separating chemical substances – e.g. colorants in water or various charged atoms, so-called ions. More sophisticated methods are required, for example, to separate different ions of similar size from each other.

In biological systems, cell membranes can already carry out such separation processes by allowing additional chemical processes to take place in the thin “pores” of the sieve. In artificially produced sieves, however, this is still a major challenge.

Scientists led by group leader Christopher Synatschke in the department “Synthesis of Macromolecules”, headed by director Tanja Weil, have now succeeded in producing a membrane just 20 nanometres – i.e. 20 millionths of a millimetre – thick that can efficiently separate different types of ions or even a mixture of dyes. The membrane consists of a material that is very similar to one produced by mussels: polydopamine. Using a so-called electropolymerization process, the polydopamine membrane can be produced in such a way that it has sub-nanometer-sized channels, i.e. sieve pores.

Like a biological cell membrane, these sieve pores have a special surface chemistry. This makes it possible, for example, to separate monovalent ions (such as singly charged sodium) and divalent ions (such as doubly charged magnesium) despite their similar size.

“Such easily producible membranes are of great interest in applications,” says Christopher Synatschke. “This makes it possible, for example, to produce more efficient filters for water, e.g. for industrial waste.”

The researchers have compared the efficiency of their membrane with others. Here, they were able to achieve a remarkable selective separation between monovalentions and larger species – more efficient than any other membrane produced to date.

The researchers hope that new applications can be developed from the new polydopamine membranes – because the material is not only environmentally friendly and biocompatible, but also particularly easy to chemically customize.

Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

Dr. Christopher Synatschke
synatschke@mpip-mainz.mpg.de

Originalpublikation:

Yu, J.; Marchesi D’Alvise, T.; Harley, I.; Krysztofik, A.; Lieberwirth, I.; Pula, P.; Majewski, P. W.; Graczykowski, B.; Hunger, J.; Landfester, K. et al.: Ion and Molecular Sieving With Ultrathin Polydopamine Nanomembranes. Advanced Materials 36 (29), 2401137 (2024)
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adma.202401137

https://www.mpip-mainz.mpg.de/en/press/pr-2024-10

Media Contact

Dr. Christian Schneider Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für Polymerforschung

All latest news from the category: Process Engineering

This special field revolves around processes for modifying material properties (milling, cooling), composition (filtration, distillation) and type (oxidation, hydration).

Valuable information is available on a broad range of technologies including material separation, laser processes, measuring techniques and robot engineering in addition to testing methods and coating and materials analysis processes.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

Energy Portrait: Capturing a Molecule’s Moment of Excitement

Researchers at the University of Regensburg in collaboration with IBM Research Europe – Zurich have found a way to access excited states of single molecules and determine their energies. A…

“Tamed” Molecules for More Sustainable Catalysts

New perspectives for the development of catalysis: Chemnitz University of Technology’s Chair of Inorganic Chemistry has succeeded in synthesizing a spectacular gallium compound in the laboratory. Catalysts play an important…

On the importance of a bowl of water for Two-Child families

How to balance the piezoelectric coefficient and carrier concentration of material for ultrahigh piezocatalysis? Piezocatalysis, which is able to convert natural mechanical energy into electrochemical energy, is considered a promising…

Partners & Sponsors