Innovators Under 35
Inventors I2. Radha Boya, 32
University
of Manchester’s Graphene Research Institute
The world’s narrowest fluid channel
could transform filtration of water and gases.
Beneath
a microscope in Radha Boya’s lab, a thin sheet of carbon has an almost
imperceptible channel cutting through its center, the depth of a single
molecule of water. “I wanted to create the most ultimately small fluidic
channels possible,” explains Boya. Her solution: identify the best building
blocks to reliably and repeatedly build a structure containing unimaginably
narrow capillaries. She settled on graphene, a form of carbon that is a single
atom thick.
She
positions two sheets of graphene (a single sheet is just 0.3 nanometers thick)
next to each other with a small lateral gap between them. That is sandwiched on
both sides with slabs of graphite, a material made of many layers of graphene
stacked on top of each other. The result is a channel 0.3 nanometers deep and
100 nanometers wide, cutting through a block of graphite. By adding extra
layers of graphene, she can tune the size of the channel in 0.3-nanometer
increments.
But
what fits through something so narrow? A water molecule—which itself measures
around 0.3 nanometers across—can’t pass through the channel without application
of pressure. But with two layers of graphene, and a 0.6-nanometer gap, water
passes through at one meter per second. “The surface of graphene is slightly
hydrophobic, so the water molecules stick to themselves rather than the walls,”
says Boya. That helps the liquid slide through easily.
Because
the gaps are so consistently sized, they could be used to build precisely tuned
filtration systems. Boya has performed experiments that show her channels could
filter salt ions from water, or separate large volatile organic compounds from
smaller gas molecules. Because of the size consistency, her technology can
filter more efficiently than others.
Boya currently works
at the University of Manchester’s Graphene Research Institute in the U.K.—a
monolithic black slab of a building that opened in 2015 to industrialize basic
research on the material. It brands itself as the “home of graphene,” which
seems appropriate given that Boya’s office is on the same corridor as those of
Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov, who won a Nobel Prize for discovering the
material.
—Jamie Condliffe
—Jamie Condliffe
MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW
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