4.8 Article

Layered tin monoselenide as advanced photothermal conversion materials for efficient solar energy-driven water evaporation

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages 2876-2886

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7nr09229f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China [2014CB931700]
  2. State Key Laboratory of Optoelectronic Materials and Technologies

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Solar energy-driven water evaporation lays a solid foundation for important photothermal applications such as sterilization, seawater desalination, and electricity generation. Due to the strong light-matter coupling, broad absorption wavelength range, and prominent quantum confinement effect, layered tin monoselenide (SnSe) holds a great potential to effectively harness solar irradiation and convert it to heat energy. In this study, SnSe is successfully deposited on a centimeter-scale nickel foam using a facile one-step pulsed-laser deposition approach. Importantly, the maximum evaporation rate of SnSe-coated nickel foam (SnSe@NF) reaches 0.85 kg m(-2) h(-1), which is even 21% larger than that obtained with the commercial super blue coating (0.7 kg m(-2) h(-1)) under the same condition. A systematic analysis reveals that its good photothermal conversion capability is attributed to the synergetic effect of multi-scattering-induced light trapping and the optimal trade-off between light absorption and phonon emission. Finally, the SnSe@NF device is further used for seawater evaporation, demonstrating a comparable evaporation rate (0.8 kg m(-2) h(-1)) to that of fresh water and good stability over many cycles of usage. In summary, the current contribution depicts a facile one-step scenario for the economical and efficient solar-enabled SnSe@NF evaporation devices. More importantly, an in-depth analysis of the photothermal conversion mechanism underneath the layered materials depicts a fundamental paradigm for the design and application of photothermal devices based on them in the future.

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