Publication

Quantum-Mechanically Enhanced Water Flow in Subnanometer Carbon Nanotubes

Giorgio Palermo
2022
Journal paper
Abstract

Water flow in carbon nanotubes (CNTs) starkly contradicts classical fluid mechanics, with permeabilities that can exceed no-slip Haagen-Poiseuille predictions by 2-5 orders of magnitude. Semiclassical molecular dynamics accounts for enhanced flow rates that are attributed to curvature-dependent lattice mismatch. However, the steeper permeability enhancement observed experimentally at about nanometer-size radii remains poorly understood, and suggests emergence of puzzling non-classical mechanisms. Here, we address water-CNT friction from a quantum mechanical perspective, in terms of water-energy loss upon phonon excitation. We find that combined weak water- phonon coupling and selection rules hinder water-CNT scattering, providing effective protection to water super flow, whereas comparison with a semiclassical theory evidences a friction increase that can exceed the quantum mechanical prediction by more than 2 orders of magnitude. Quasi-frictionless flow up to subnanometer CNTs opens new pathways toward minimally invasive trans-membrane cellular injections, single-water fluidics, and efficient water filtration.

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