Biological ion channels exemplify nature’s high-efficiency ion selectivity filters, yet replicating their functional architectures in synthetic membranes remains a fundamental challenge. Here, we report an ultramicroporous hydrogen-bonded organic framework membrane that structurally emulates the CLC chloride filter. Its channels exhibit size adaptability to anions and incorporate hydrogen-bond donors that provide “low-viscosity” compensatory interactions, thereby alleviating anion dehydration energy penalties. By leveraging differential dehydration and energy compensation between Cl − and larger anions such as SO 4 2− , this bioinspired design achieves an exceptional Cl − /SO 4 2− selectivity of over 400—several tens of times higher than those of existing counterparts—while maintaining a high Cl − permeation rate double that of the commercial Neosepta ® ACS membrane, setting a new benchmark for advanced anion-sieving membranes. In electrodialysis (ED) for high-salinity wastewater valorization, our membrane enables higher NaCl product purity (99.62 wt% vs. 72.86 wt%) with 28.7% lower energy consumption than the Neosepta ® ACS membrane. This work establishes a biomimetic design principle of biological anion channels that is potentially extendable to a wide range of selective and conductive membranes.
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Suixin Zhang
Anhui University
Zongliang Wan
Anhui University
Xu Zhang
Anhui University
Nature Communications
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Zhang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/699b9eefcdd3ba3e8975b6c4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-69947-3