4.8 Article

Enhanced solar evaporation using a photo-thermal umbrella for wastewater management

Journal

NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages 144-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41893-019-0445-5

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Funding

  1. Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  2. ITRI-Rosenfeld Fellowship from the Energy Technologies Area at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  3. Zeno Karl Schindler Foundation

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By passively evaporating water from waste streams, evaporation ponds work with different waste streams but need large areas due to low evaporation rates. This study shows that a photo-thermal device converting sunlight into mid-infrared radiation could enhance evaporation and reduce land needs. Zero-liquid discharge is an emerging wastewater management strategy that maximizes water recovery for reuse and produces a solid waste, thereby lowering the environmental impact of wastewater disposal. Evaporation ponds harvest solar energy as heat for zero-liquid discharge, but require large land areas due to low evaporation rates. Here, we demonstrate a passive and non-contact approach to enhance evaporation by more than 100% using a photo-thermal device that converts sunlight into mid-infrared radiation where water is strongly absorbing. As a result, heat is localized at the water's surface through radiative coupling, resulting in better utilization of solar energy with a conversion efficiency of 43%. The non-contact nature of the device makes it uniquely suited to treat a wide range of wastewater without contamination, and the use of commercial materials enables a potentially low-cost and highly scalable technology for sustainable wastewater management, with the added benefit of salt recovery.

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