4.7 Article

Interfacial Photothermal Heat Accumulation for Simultaneous Salt Rejection and Freshwater Generation; an Efficient Solar Energy Harvester

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 12, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano12183206

Keywords

photothermal heat; interfacial; solar evaporation; salt-rejection; water scarcity

Funding

  1. Wuhan Material Decoration and Measurement and Control Engineering Technology Research Center [430164301211001]
  2. Intellectual Property Project of the Hubei Provincial Intellectual Property Office

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Water scarcity is a serious threat to humanity and needs attention from the scientific community. Solar-driven interfacial evaporation and seawater desalination are promising strategies to resolve this issue. The authors developed a cost-effective solar-driven evaporation system using carbon cloth-wrapped polyurethane foam, which showed high efficiency and evaporation rate. This system has the potential for efficient freshwater production and salt rejection.
Water scarcity has emerged as an intense global threat to humanity and needs prompt attention from the scientific community. Solar-driven interfacial evaporation and seawater desalination are promising strategies to resolve the primitive water shortage issue using renewable resources. However, the fragile solar thermal devices, complex fabricating techniques, and high cost greatly hinder extensive solar energy utilization in remote locations. Herein, we report the facile fabrication of a cost-effective solar-driven interfacial evaporator and seawater desalination system composed of carbon cloth (CC)-wrapped polyurethane foam (CC@PU). The developed solar evaporator had outstanding photo-thermal conversion efficiency (90%) with a high evaporation rate (1.71 kg m(-2) h(-1)). The interfacial layer of black CC induced multiple incident rays on the surface allowing the excellent solar absorption (92%) and intensifying heat localization (67.37 degrees C) under 1 kW m(-2) with spatially defined hydrophilicity to facilitate the easy vapor escape and validate the efficacious evaporation structure using extensive solar energy exploitation for practical application. More importantly, the long-term evaporation experiments with minimum discrepancy under seawater conditions endowed excellent mass change (15.24 kg m(-2) in consecutive 8 h under 1 kW m(-2) solar irradiations) and promoted its operational sustainability for multi-media rejection and self-dissolving potential (3.5 g NaCl rejected from CC@PU surface in 210 min). Hence, the low-cost and facile fabrication of CC@PU-based interfacial evaporation structure showcases the potential for enhanced solar-driven interfacial heat accumulation for freshwater production with simultaneous salt rejection.

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