Published December 5, 2025 | Version v1
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Aqueous amination of track-etched polycarbonate membranes for tuneable nanochannel surface charge density

Description

Abstract:

Track-etched polycarbonate (PC) membranes with nanochannels are versatile materials for electrochemical, energy-harvesting, and separation applications. Precise control over their surface charge is critical, as it governs ion selectivity, electroosmotic flow, and overall ionic transport behaviour in confined nanochannels. However, environmentally friendly and scalable strategies to precisely tune their surface charge remain limited. Amination is a practical approach for PC membrane functionalisation, as it introduces protonatable amine groups that enhance the positive surface charge and enable further chemical modifications via mild, aqueous reactions. Here, we report a simple aqueous amination method that enables systematic control of surface charge density in PC membranes between 0.0015–0.0034 C cm−2. Commercial PC membranes with nominal pore sizes of 0.015, 0.05, and 0.1 µm were functionalised with a series of amines, hexamethylenediamine (HMDA), triethylenetetramine (TETA), polyethyleneimine (PEI), and glycine (Gly), through urethane-bond formation with surface carbonyl groups under mild aqueous conditions. Elemental and spectroscopic analyses confirmed efficient functionalisation and tuneable nitrogen content (9.7–22.6 at%), related to variable surface charge density, achieved by varying reaction parameters such as concentration, time, temperature, and amine type. The highest surface charge density of 0.0034 C cm−2 was achieved using 5% w/v TETA on PC membranes with 0.1 µm diameter. This scalable, low-energy pathway for PC membrane functionalisation is even compatible with ultrasmall pores, down to ∼15 nm. The charge densities achieved through this green aqueous functionalisation are the highest among other surface charge-tuning methods, such as plasma, ultraviolet, or polymer-grafting methods. Aqueous amination-based functionalisation is suitable for fabricating charge-tuneable, ion-selective membranes for nanofluidic energy conversion, electrochemical sensing, and other surface-charge-governed applications.

Notes (English)

TRANSLATE is a €3.4 million EU-funded research project that aims to develop a new nanofluidic platform technology to effectively convert waste heat to electricity. This technology has the potential to improve the energy efficiency of many devices and systems, and provide a radically new zero-emission power source. The TRANSLATE project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 964251, for the action of 'The Recycling of waste heat through the Application of Nanofluidic ChannelS: Advances in the Conversion of Thermal to Electrical energy'. More information can be be found on the TRANSLATE project website: https://translate-energy.eu/

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
TRANSLATE - The Recycling of waste heat through the Application of Nanofluidic ChannelS: Advances in the Conversion of Thermal to Electrical energy 964251

Dates

Available
2025-12-05