Recently,
a solar-driven evaporator has been applied in seawater
desalination, but the low stability, high cost, and complex fabrication
limit its further application. Herein, we report a novel, low-cost,
scalable, and easily fabricated pulp-natural rubber (PNR) foam with
a unique porous structure, which was directly used as a solar-driven
evaporator after facile surface carbonization. This surface carbonized
PNR (CPNR) foam without interface adhesion or modification was composed
of a top photothermal layer with light absorption ability and a bottom
hydrophilic foam layer with a porous and interconnected network structure.
Due to the strong light absorption ability (93.2%) of the carbonized
top layer, together with the low thermal conductivity (0.1 W m K–1) and good water adsorption performance (9.9 g g–1) of the bottom layer, the evaporation rate and evaporation
efficiency of the pulp foam evaporator under 1 sun of illumination
attained 1.62 kg m–2 h–1 and 98.09%,
respectively, which were much higher than those of most cellulose-based
solar-driven evaporators. Furthermore, the CPNR foam evaporator with
high cost-effectiveness presented high light-thermal conversion, heat
localization, and good salt rejection properties due to the unique
porous structure. Additionally, the CPNR foam evaporator exhibited
potential applications in the treatments of simulated sewage, metal
ion concentration, and seawater desalination. Its cost-effectiveness
was clearly higher than that of most reported evaporators as well.
Therefore, this novel, low-cost, and stable pulp foam evaporator demonstrated
here can be a very promising solution for water desalination and purification.