Published in

Nature Research, Nature Nanotechnology, 11(2), p. 709-712, 2007

DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2007.320

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A charge-driven molecular water pump

Journal article published in 2007 by Xiaojing Gong, Jingyuan Li ORCID, Hangjun Lu, Rongzheng Wan, Jichen Li, Jun Hu, Haiping Fang
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Understanding and controlling the transport of water across nanochannels is of great importance for designing novel molecular devices, machines and sensors and has wide applications, including the desalination of seawater. Nanopumps driven by electric or magnetic fields can transport ions and magnetic quanta, but water is charge-neutral and has no magnetic moment. On the basis of molecular dynamics simulations, we propose a design for a molecular water pump. The design uses a combination of charges positioned adjacent to a nanopore and is inspired by the structure of channels in the cellular membrane that conduct water in and out of the cell (aquaporins). The remarkable pumping ability is attributed to the charge dipole-induced ordering of water confined in the nanochannels, where water can be easily driven by external fields in a concerted fashion. These findings may provide possibilities for developing water transport devices that function without osmotic pressure or a hydrostatic pressure gradient.