Reusing polluted water through various decontamination techniques has appeared as one of the most practical approaches to address the global shortage of clean water. Rather than relying on single decontamination mechanism, herein we report the preparation and utilization of paper-based composites for multifunctional solar-driven clean water generation that is inspired by the multiple water purification approaches in biological systems. The reduced graphene oxide (rGO) sheets within such composites can efficiently remove organic contaminants through physical adsorption mechanism. Under solar irradiation, the floating rGO composites can instantly generate localized heating, which not only can directly generate clean water through distillation mechanism but also significantly enhance adsorption removal performance with the assistance of upward vapor flow. Such porous-structured paper-based composites allow for facile incorporation of photocatalysts to regenerate clean water out of contaminated water with combined adsorption, photodegradation, and interfacial heat-assisted distillation mechanisms. Within a homemade all-in-one water treatment device, the practical applicability of the composites for multifunctional clean water generation has been demonstrated.
This paper presents a new steam sterilization approach that uses a solar-driven evaporation system at the water/air interface. Compared to the conventional solar autoclave, this new steam sterilization approach via interfacial evaporation requires no complex system design to bear high steam pressure. In such a system, a reduced graphene oxide/polytetrafluoroethylene composite membrane floating at the water/air interface serves as a light-to-heat conversion medium to harvest and convert incident solar light into localized heat. Such localized heat raises the temperature of the membrane substantially and helps generate steam with a temperature higher than 120 °C. A sterilization device that takes advantage of the interfacial solar-driven evaporation system was built and its successful sterilization capability was demonstrated through both chemical and biological sterilization tests. The interfacial evaporation-based solar driven sterilization approach offers a potential low cost solution to meet the need for sterilization in undeveloped areas that lack electrical power but have ample solar radiation.
This report investigates the enhancement of localized evaporation via separated light absorbing particles (plasmonic absorbers) and scattering particles (polystyrene nanoparticles). Evaporation has been considered as one of the most important phase-change processes in modern industries. To improve the efficiency of evaporation, one of the most feasible methods is to localize heat at the top water layer rather than heating the bulk water. In this work, the mixture of purely light absorptive plasmonic nanostructures such as gold nanoparticles and purely scattering particles (polystyrene nanoparticles) are employed to confine the incident light at the top of the solution and convert light to heat. Different concentrations of both the light absorbing centers and the light scattering centers were evaluated and the evaporation performance can be largely enhanced with the balance between absorbing centers and scattering centers. The findings in this study not only provide a new way to improve evaporation efficiency in plasmonic particle-based solution, but also shed lights on the design of new solar-driven localized evaporation systems.
This paper reports the highly efficient pyroelectric nanomaterial-based catalytic degradation of waste dye under rapid temperature oscillation, which was achieved by periodical solar irradiation on a porous pyroelectric membrane that was floating at the liquid/air interface. Such a membrane consists of the light-to-heat conversion carbon black film as the top layer and the porous poly(vinylidene difluoride) (PVDF) film embedded with pyroelectric barium titanate (BaTiO) nanoparticles (BTO NPs) as the bottom layer. By using an optical chopper, solar light can be modulated to periodically irradiate on the floating membrane. Because of the photothermal effect and low thermal conductivity of the PVDF polymer, the generated heat is localized at the surface of the membrane and substantially increases the surface temperature within a short period of time. When the solar light is blocked by the chopper, interfacial evaporation through the porous membrane along with convective air cooling and radiative cooling leads to heat dissipation, and then the temperature of the membrane is rapidly decreased. Such an efficient thermal cycle results in a substantial rate of temperature change of the membrane, which enhances its pyroelectric capability and subsequent pyro-catalysis. In contrast, the efficiency of pyro-catalysis through the dispersed BTO NP solution is about 4 times lower than that of the BTO composite membrane. With the large heat capacity of the aqueous solution and inevitable thermal loss because of bulk heating, the rate of temperature change of the BTO NP solution is much smaller than that of the BTO composite membrane and thus results in a relatively small pyro-catalytic capability. Furthermore, the reusability and transferability of this newly developed composite membrane make it amenable to practical use in treating contaminated water. The findings in our report not only offer a new design strategy for efficient solar-enabled pyro-catalysis but also pave a new way to rationally harvest solar-thermal energy in nature for various applications that involve pyroelectric materials.
This work reports an interfacial evaporation-driven approach for self-assembly of a thermoplasmonic gold nanoparticle film at the interface of liquid/air.
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