Quantum-mechanical water-flow enhancement through a sub-nanometer carbon nanotube

Experimental observations unambiguously reveal quasi-frictionless water flow through nanometer-scale carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Classical fluid mechanics is deemed unfit to describe this enhanced flow, and recent investigations indicated that quantum mechanics is required to interpret the extremely we...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of chemical physics 2023-11, Vol.159 (20)
Hauptverfasser: Ambrosetti, Alberto, Silvestrelli, Pier Luigi
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Experimental observations unambiguously reveal quasi-frictionless water flow through nanometer-scale carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Classical fluid mechanics is deemed unfit to describe this enhanced flow, and recent investigations indicated that quantum mechanics is required to interpret the extremely weak water–CNT friction. In fact, by quantum scattering, water can only release discrete energy upon excitation of electronic and phononic modes in the CNT. Here, we analyze in detail how a traveling water molecule couples to both plasmon and phonon excitations within a sub-nanometer, periodic CNT. We find that the water molecule needs to exceed a minimum speed threshold of ∼50 m/s in order to scatter against CNT electronic and vibrational modes. Below this threshold, scattering is suppressed, as in standard superfluidity mechanisms. The scattering rates, relevant for faster water molecules, are also estimated.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/5.0182711