Knudsen diffusion in silicon nanochannels

Phys Rev Lett. 2008 Feb 15;100(6):064502. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.100.064502. Epub 2008 Feb 12.

Abstract

Measurements on helium and argon gas flow through an array of parallel, linear channels of 12 nm diameter and 200 microm length in a single crystalline silicon membrane reveal a Knudsen diffusion type transport from 10(2) to 10(7) in Knudsen number Kn. The classic scaling prediction for the transport diffusion coefficient on temperature and mass of diffusing species, D(He) is proportional to square root T, is confirmed over a T range from 40 K to 300 K for He and for the ratio of D(He)/D(Ar) is proportional to square root (m(Ar)/m(He)). Deviations of the channels from a cylindrical form, resolved with electron microscopy down to subnanometer scales, quantitatively account for a reduced diffusivity as compared to Knudsen diffusion in ideal tubular channels. The membrane permeation experiments are described over 10 orders of magnitude in Kn, encompassing the transition flow regime, by the unified flow model of Beskok and Karniadakis.