Selective Deionization of Thin-Layer Samples Using Tandem Carbon Nanotubes-Polymeric Membranes.

Anal Chem

Department of Chemistry, School of Engineering Science in Chemistry, Biochemistry and Health, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Teknikringen 30, SE-114 28 Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores selective deionization in thin-layer samples using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) integrated with ionophore-based ion-selective membranes (ISM) to create a CNT-ISM actuator.
  • A mild potential step activates the CNTs to selectively remove ions from the sample, with the ISM facilitating the transport of only specific ions towards the CNTs.
  • The research shows that deionization efficiency depends on the capacitance of CNTs and suggests that by changing the ionophore in the ISM, different ions can be selectively removed, paving the way for advancements in analytical sensing by mitigating ionic interference.

Article Abstract

Herein, we investigate the selective deionization (i.e., the removal of ions) in thin-layer samples (<100 μm in thickness) using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) covered with an ionophore-based ion-selective membrane (ISM), resulting in a CNT-ISM tandem actuator. The concept of selective deionization is based on a recent discovery by our group ( 2022, 94, 21, 7455-7459), where the activation of the CNT-ISM architecture is conceived on a mild potential step that charges the CNTs to ultimately generate the depletion of ions in a thin-layer sample. The role of the ISM is to selectively facilitate the transport of only one ion species to the CNT lattice. To estimate the deionization efficiency of such a process, a potentiometric sensor is placed less than 100 μm away from the CNT-ISM tandem, inside a microfluidic cell. This configuration helped to reveal that the selective uptake of ions increases with the capacitance of the CNTs and that the ISM requires a certain ion-exchanger capacity, but this does not further affect its efficiency. The versatility of the concept is demonstrated by comparing the selective uptake of five different ions (H, Li, Na, K, and Ca), suggesting the possibility to remove any cation from a sample by simply changing the ionophore in the ISM. Furthermore, ISMs based on two ionophores proved to achieve the simultaneous and selective deionization of two ion species using the same actuator. Importantly, the relative uptake between the two ions was found to be governed by the ion-ionophore binding constants, with the most strongly bound ion being favored over other ions. The CNT-ISM actuator concept is expected to contribute to the analytical sensing field in the sense that ionic interferents influencing the analytical signal can selectively be removed from samples to lower traditional limits of detection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10603610PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.3c02965DOI Listing

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