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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Hydrophilic 3D Interconnected Network of Bacterial Nanocellulose/Black Titania Photothermal Foams as an Efficient Interfacial Solar Evaporator

ACS Applied Bio Materials 2021 40 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Kallayi Nabeela, Reny Thankam Thomas, Meghana N. Thorat, Meghana N. Thorat, Sumina Namboorimadathil Backer, Alaa Mohamed, Animesh M. Ramachandran, Animesh M. Ramachandran, Alaa Mohamed, Reny Thankam Thomas, Gopika Preethikumar, Gopika Preethikumar, Alaa Mohamed, Adersh Asok, Syed G. Dastager, Saju Pillai

Summary

Researchers developed a self-floating bacterial nanocellulose/black titania photothermal foam for interfacial solar evaporation, demonstrating that the bilayer system efficiently captures solar energy and can concentrate and remove microplastics from water surfaces.

Study Type Environmental

The design and development of scalable, efficient photothermal evaporator systems that reduce microplastic pollution are highly desirable. Herein, a sustainable bacterial nanocellulose (BNC)-based self-floating bilayer photothermal foam (PTF<sub>b</sub>) is designed that eases the effective confinement of solar light for efficient freshwater production via interfacial heating. The sandwich nanoarchitectured porous bilayer solar evaporator consists of a top solar-harvesting blackbody layer composed of broad-spectrum active black titania (BT) nanoparticles embedded in the BNC matrix and a thick bottom layer of pristine BNC for agile thermal management, the efficient wicking of bulk water, and staying afloat. A decisive advantage of the BNC network is that it enables the fabrication of a lightweight photothermal foam with reduced thermal conductivity and high wet strength. Additionally, the hydrophilic three-dimensional (3D) interconnected porous network of BNC contributes to the fast evaporation of water under ambient solar conditions with reduced vaporization enthalpy by virtue of intermediated water generated via a BNC-water interaction. The fabricated PTF<sub>b</sub> is found to yield a water evaporation efficiency of 84.3% (under 1054 W m<sup>-2</sup>) with 4 wt % BT loading. Furthermore, scalable PTF<sub>b</sub> realized a water production rate of 1.26 L m<sup>-2</sup> h<sup>-1</sup> under real-time conditions. The developed eco-friendly BNC-supported BT foams could be used in applications such as solar desalination, contaminated water purification, extraction of water from moisture, etc., and thus could address one of the major present-day global concerns of drinking water scarcity.

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