TY - JOUR
T1 - A high-efficiency solar desalination evaporator composite of corn stalk, Mcnts and TiO2:Ultra-fast capillary water moisture transportation and porous bio-tissue multi-layer filtration
AU - Sun, Zhuangzhi
AU - Li, Wenzong
AU - Song, Wenlong
AU - Zhang, Laichang
AU - Wang, Zuankai
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors gratefully acknowledge the nancial support by the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation Funded Project (Grant No. 2018M630330 & No. 2019T120245), Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province (Grant No. QC2018046), National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 51905085), and Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Grant No. 2572017PZ12).
Publisher Copyright:
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2020/1/7
Y1 - 2020/1/7
N2 - Studies on solar steam evaporation for potential application in desalination have attracted much attention due to its unique advantages of low energy consumption environmental friendliness, etc. However, water molecule transportation in the capillaries of solar steam evaporators to develop a high-efficiency solar evaporation system is critical but often ignored. This work reports high-yield and low-cost natural corn stalks as solar steam generators with ultra-fast water transportation in capillaries, multi-layer self-cleaning of sea salt, large seawater storage capacity, long-term anti-corrosion properties against seawater, low thermal conductivity, and excellent evaporation properties. This solar steam evaporator with the conventional photothermal coating by multi-walled carbon nanotubes and titanium dioxide (Mcnt-TiO2) exhibits an outstanding evaporation rate of 2.48 kg m-2 h-1 and evaporation efficiency of 68.2% under solar light. These advantages are significantly attributed to the natural structural features of the stem marrow of corn stalks including scattered vascular bundles with super-hydrophilic properties achieving high-speed water moisture transportation, porous basic tissues with layer by layer bio-filtration, porous cavities realizing multi-stage filtration, transportation and storage of seawater, and low moisture enthalpy and heat loss. Meanwhile, an efficient and low-cost solar desalination device via bundling pluralities of corn stalks is developed to collect freshwater, and the average daily freshwater amount per unit area (4.3-5.8 kg m-2 on sunny days and 3.0-3.9 kg m-2 on cloudy days) can meet the daily water needs of more than twenty adults. These findings not only provide the possibility of discovering corn stalks as low-cost, scalable, highly efficient evaporation-based heat transfer devices for future efficient desalination, but also present an innovative inspiration for reducing the greenhouse effect brought by corn stalk burning, which promotes the efficient use of bio-mass straws.
AB - Studies on solar steam evaporation for potential application in desalination have attracted much attention due to its unique advantages of low energy consumption environmental friendliness, etc. However, water molecule transportation in the capillaries of solar steam evaporators to develop a high-efficiency solar evaporation system is critical but often ignored. This work reports high-yield and low-cost natural corn stalks as solar steam generators with ultra-fast water transportation in capillaries, multi-layer self-cleaning of sea salt, large seawater storage capacity, long-term anti-corrosion properties against seawater, low thermal conductivity, and excellent evaporation properties. This solar steam evaporator with the conventional photothermal coating by multi-walled carbon nanotubes and titanium dioxide (Mcnt-TiO2) exhibits an outstanding evaporation rate of 2.48 kg m-2 h-1 and evaporation efficiency of 68.2% under solar light. These advantages are significantly attributed to the natural structural features of the stem marrow of corn stalks including scattered vascular bundles with super-hydrophilic properties achieving high-speed water moisture transportation, porous basic tissues with layer by layer bio-filtration, porous cavities realizing multi-stage filtration, transportation and storage of seawater, and low moisture enthalpy and heat loss. Meanwhile, an efficient and low-cost solar desalination device via bundling pluralities of corn stalks is developed to collect freshwater, and the average daily freshwater amount per unit area (4.3-5.8 kg m-2 on sunny days and 3.0-3.9 kg m-2 on cloudy days) can meet the daily water needs of more than twenty adults. These findings not only provide the possibility of discovering corn stalks as low-cost, scalable, highly efficient evaporation-based heat transfer devices for future efficient desalination, but also present an innovative inspiration for reducing the greenhouse effect brought by corn stalk burning, which promotes the efficient use of bio-mass straws.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85076679141&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1039/c9ta10898j
DO - 10.1039/c9ta10898j
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85076679141
SN - 2050-7488
VL - 8
SP - 349
EP - 357
JO - Journal of Materials Chemistry A
JF - Journal of Materials Chemistry A
IS - 1
ER -