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February 14, 2025

Self-sealing, atomically thin dialysis membranes: Proteins transform leakage into filtration advantage

Graphical abstract. Credit: Nano Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c04706
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Graphical abstract. Credit: Nano Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c04706

A Vanderbilt-led research team has made a significant breakthrough in developing advanced dialysis membranes using atomically thin materials like graphene. These innovative membranes, called nanoporous atomically thin membranes (NATMs), leverage a protein-enabled sealing mechanism to address a key challenge in dialysis technology, which is maintaining high efficiency in filtering small molecules while minimizing protein loss.

The work is in the journal Nano Letters.

Dialysis membranes must balance two critical functions: allowing to pass through for removal while preventing the leakage of vital proteins. The team's approach uses the unique properties of graphene—its extreme thinness and customizable nanopores—to enable precise and rapid filtration. However, even a single large pore can cause excessive leakage, compromising the membrane's performance.

To tackle this, the researchers developed a novel method that transforms leakage into an advantage. When proteins escape through larger pores, they react with molecules on the other side of the graphene membrane. This reaction triggers a sealing process, selectively closing larger pores while preserving smaller ones.

This self-sealing capability ensures precise size-selective filtration and improves the membrane's overall effectiveness.

"The ability to seal inconsistent pore sizes and selectively filter molecules based on size represents a new paradigm for dialysis membranes," said Peifu Cheng, research assistant professor of chemical and and first author of the study.

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"Proteins and biomolecules have a natural flexibility that allows them to deform slightly when passing through nanopores," Cheng explained. "Our approach builds on this property, significantly advancing beyond current dialysis technologies and commercially available membranes."

Assistant Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Piran Kidambi, who led the project, emphasized the groundbreaking nature of the work. "Our study introduces proteins as nanoscale tools to engineer sizes in atomically thin membranes, overcoming critical challenges in current dialysis systems.

"To the best of our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of such a method, and it opens the door to utilizing a wide range of biomolecules—including DNA and RNA—for precise fabrication."

The team demonstrated this protein-enabled size-selective defect sealing (PDS) method on centimeter-scale graphene membranes. These defect-sealed NATMs remained stable for up to 35 days and consistently outperformed state-of-the-art commercial membranes.

More information: Peifu Cheng et al, Protein-Enabled Size-Selective Defect-Sealing of Atomically Thin 2D Membranes for Dialysis and Nanoscale Separations, Nano Letters (2024).

Journal information: Nano Letters

Provided by Vanderbilt University

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Advanced dialysis membranes using atomically thin materials like graphene have been developed, featuring a protein-enabled sealing mechanism. This innovation addresses the challenge of filtering small molecules while minimizing protein loss. The membranes utilize graphene's customizable nanopores for precise filtration, with a novel method that transforms protein leakage into an advantage by sealing larger pores. This self-sealing capability enhances size-selective filtration and membrane effectiveness, outperforming current commercial options.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.