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Direction-limited water transport and inhibited heat convection loss of gradient-structured hydrogels for highly efficient interfacial evaporation.

Authors :
Liang, Xuechen
Zhang, Xinjie
Liu, Zhipeng
Huang, Qichen
Zhang, Han
Liu, Changkun
Liu, Yizhen
Source :
Solar Energy. May2020, Vol. 201, p581-588. 8p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Gradient structure demonstrates an enhanced capillary effect. • Gradient structure can hinder water flow and inhibit heat convection loss. • An evaporation efficiency of 93.4% is achieved under 1 sun illumination. • Template method (Teflon-glass) is used to prepare gradient structured hydrogel. • Microgels are attracted by the Teflon plate showing gradient distribution. Solar interfacial evaporation is a promising way to generate clean water from seawater using clean, abundant, and sustainable solar energy. However, non-directionally moving water with high thermal conductivity acts inevitably as a medium for heat transfer from the surface to the bottom through heat convection, resulting in low energy efficiency and a low evaporation rate. Herein, a gradient structured composite hydrogel combining a desired functional differentiation is reported. The network sizes in the hydrogel continuously change, demonstrating an enhanced capillary effect and a direction-limited water supply capability, inhibiting the heat convection loss. In addition, the reported gradient hydrogel shows broadband light absorption, satisfactory mechanical properties under a saturated swelling state, an unusually higher water evaporation rate for brine compared with that for pure water, and an inherent ability to evaporate under both 1 sun illumination and dark environment. The proposed gradient channels to restrict the flow direction of liquid, and consequently the heat convection loss, will have an significant impact on the design of other efficient photothermal evaporation systems and even the field of mass and heat transfer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0038092X
Volume :
201
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Solar Energy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142615414
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.solener.2020.03.042