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  4. Room-Temperature Deuterium Separation in van Der Waals Gap Engineered Vermiculite Quantum Sieves
 
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Room-Temperature Deuterium Separation in van Der Waals Gap Engineered Vermiculite Quantum Sieves

Source
Small
ISSN
16136810
Date Issued
2025-03-26
Author(s)
Lalita, Saini
Aparna, Rathi
Suvigya, Kaushik
Yeh, Li Hsien
Gopinadhan, Kalon  
DOI
10.1002/smll.202412229
Volume
21
Issue
12
Abstract
As the demand for nuclear energy grows, enriching deuterium from hydrogen mixtures has become more important. However, traditional methods are either very energy-intensive because they require extremely cold temperatures, or they don't separate deuterium (D<inf>2</inf>) from regular hydrogen (H<inf>2</inf>) very well, with a D<inf>2</inf>/H<inf>2</inf> selectivity of ≈0.71. To achieve efficient deuterium separation at room temperature, materials with very tiny spaces, on an atomic scale are needed. For the first time, a material with spaces just ≈2.1 Å (angstroms) wide is successfully created, which is similar in size to the wavelength of hydrogen isotopes at room temperature. This allows for efficient deuterium separation, with a much higher D<inf>2</inf>/H<inf>2</inf> selectivity of ≈2.20, meaning the material can separate deuterium from hydrogen much more effectively at room temperature. The smaller deuterium molecules are more likely to pass through these tiny spaces, showing that quantum effects play a key role in this process. In contrast, a material like graphene oxide, with larger spaces (≈4.0 Å), only shows a lower D<inf>2</inf>/H<inf>2</inf> selectivity of ≈1.17, indicating weaker quantum effects. This discovery suggests that materials with very small, atomic-scale spaces can be key to efficient separation of hydrogen isotopes at room temperature.
Unpaywall
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/28216
Subjects
2d materials | hydrogen isotope separation | quantum sieving | van der Waals gap
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