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Bilayer Designed Paper-Based Solar Evaporator for Efficient Seawater Desalination

Nanomaterials 2022 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ying Qin, Yongzheng Li, Ruijie Wu, Xiaodi Wang, Jinli Qin, Fengshan Zhang, Jinli Qin, Yingjuan Fu, Menghua Qin, Zhiwei Wang Ying Qin, Fengshan Zhang, Zhiwei Wang Yongchao Zhang, Fengshan Zhang, Zhiwei Wang Zhiwei Wang

Summary

Researchers designed and fabricated a bilayered paper-based solar evaporator using cellulose fibers decorated with Fe3O4 nanoparticles as the photothermal absorbing top layer and unmodified cellulose as the supporting substrate, demonstrating efficient solar-driven seawater desalination using sustainable and low-cost materials.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Solar desalination devices utilizing sustainable solar energy and the abundant resource of seawater has great potential as a response to global freshwater scarcity. Herein, a bilayered solar evaporator was designed and fabricated utilizing a facile paper sheet forming technology, which was composed of cellulose fibers decorated with Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> nanoparticles as the top absorbent layer and the original cellulose fibers as the bottom supporting substrate. The characterization of the cellulose fibers decorated with Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> nanoparticles revealed that the in situ formed Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub> nanoparticles were successfully loaded on the fiber surface and presented a unique rough surface, endowing the absorber layer with highly efficient light absorption and photothermal conversion. Moreover, due to its superhydrophilic property, the cellulose fiber-based bottom substrate conferred ultra-speed water transport capability, which could enable an adequate water supply to combat the water loss caused by continuous evaporation on the top layer. With the advantages mentioned above, our designed bilayered paper-based evaporator achieved an evaporation rate ~1.22 kg m<sup>-2</sup> h<sup>-1</sup> within 10 min under 1 sun irradiation, which was much higher than that of original cellulose cardboard. Based on the simple and scalable manufacture process, the bilayered paper-based evaporator may have great potential as a highly efficient photothermal conversion material for real-world desalination applications.

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