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A biomass-derived, all-day-round solar evaporation platform for harvesting clean water from microplastic pollution.

Authors :
Meng, Xiangyu
Peng, Xiaoli
Xue, Jing
Wei, Yen
Sun, Yueming
Dai, Yunqian
Source :
Journal of Materials Chemistry A; 5/7/2021, Vol. 9 Issue 17, p11013-11024, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Solar-driven evaporation is highly promising for sustainable freshwater production without high energy-consumption. Till now, it has still been challenging to achieve both high performance and cost-effectiveness within one evaporator. In addition, the rarely reported strategy overcomes the obstacles of emerging microplastic-pollution in water sources and poor all-day-round evaporation. Herein, a low-cost, high-efficiency, biomass-derived three-dimensional (3D) graphene/cotton sponge with gradient vertical microchannels was readily constructed by simply stretching cotton. It served as a versatile photothermal platform with a high evaporation rate (2.49 kg m<superscript>−2</superscript> h<superscript>−1</superscript>, normalized to both the top and side surfaces) and could withstand a large external stress of up to 8750-times its weight. Moreover, in the first attempt to efficiently evaporate water (90.6%) from a microplastic-polluted source, nearly 100% of the polyethylene (PE) microfibers were removed from evaporated water by 3D MoS<subscript>2</subscript>/graphene/cotton via reactive oxygen species attack and multi-level interception. New in situ FTIR microscopy technology was employed to accurately monitor the degradation mechanism of the PE microplastics. The PE degradation efficiency was as high as 19% in oxygen-enriched water, predominantly contributed by reactive O<subscript>2</subscript>˙<superscript>−</superscript>, and could be easily enhanced to 32% with the aid of additional reactive species (e.g., ˙HOO and H<subscript>2</subscript>O<subscript>2</subscript>) in 1 h. Besides, under the guidance of finite element analysis (FEA), a phase-change polyethylene glycol (PEG) layer was functionalized outside the graphene/cotton. Notably, it possessed a remarkably high all-day-round evaporation rate (1.63 kg per m<superscript>2</superscript> per h per day, 1.42-times that achieved by a traditional evaporator without phase-change function) by utilizing thermal energy in the dark. This work gives promising alternative strategies for low-cost clean-water harvesting from microplastic-pollution and sustainable evaporation even under dark conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20507488
Volume :
9
Issue :
17
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150126521
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ta02004h