In an electrolytic cell a membrane consisting of dielectric material such as
an
organic polymer, which separates two chambers of the electrolytic cell from each
other is produced using an etching solution which is provided in one of the chambers,
contains active etching ions, while the other chamber contains a solution, which
does not have an etching action. An electrical field is generated through the membrane.
The etching progresses along ion tracks in the membrane and first produces one
funnel-shaped pore per ion track. Immediately prior to the breakthrough, the ions,
which do not have an etching action, begin to penetrate the still existent thin
layer with fine pores—the active layer—and displace the ions with an
etching action. An intensified electric current, driven by the adjacent field,
is established and the etching process at the bottom of the pore shifts sideways
according to the concentration of etching ions still present. The process is stopped
by deactivating the field and flushing the membrane.