TY - JOUR
T1 - Full Biomass-Derived Solar Stills for Robust and Stable Evaporation To Collect Clean Water from Various Water-Bearing Media
AU - Fang, Qile
AU - Li, Tiantian
AU - Chen, Zaiming
AU - Lin, Haibo
AU - Wang, Peng
AU - Liu, Fu
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2020-10-01
Acknowledgements: This work was kindly supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51603209, 51502312, 5161101025) and Ningbo Science and Technology Bureau (2014B81004, 2017C110034).
PY - 2019/2/25
Y1 - 2019/2/25
N2 - Solar steam generation is considered to be a promising strategy for sustainable clean water supply. An easily made and robust solar still can practically meet any contingency in wilderness survival, compared to high-cost and delicate solar thermal materials, for example, plasmonic metals, carbon nanotubes, or graphene-based materials. Inspired by rice plants with high transpiration, we develop a universal solar steam-generation device from wasted rice straw for robust clean water production. The upper leaves of rice straw are carbonized and composited with bacterial cellulose to function as a superior light absorber and the lower culms are designed as excellent water pumps. The unique capillary structures and multilevel geometrical structures of the rice culms contribute to their outstanding water pumping capacity for surface evaporation, resulting in an evaporation rate of 1.2 kg m-2 h-1 with 75.8% conversion efficiency. The rice straw-derived solar still has a daily clean water yield of 6.4-7.9 kg m-2 on sunny days and 4.6-5.6 kg m-2 on cloudy days over 14 days of operation. More attention-grabbing aspect is that this evaporation device is applicable to various water-bearing media, for example, sand, soil, and seawater, to collect clean water with a stable evaporation performance, and the unique multilevel structures of the culms make great contribution to the unimpeded water channels. By turning
AB - Solar steam generation is considered to be a promising strategy for sustainable clean water supply. An easily made and robust solar still can practically meet any contingency in wilderness survival, compared to high-cost and delicate solar thermal materials, for example, plasmonic metals, carbon nanotubes, or graphene-based materials. Inspired by rice plants with high transpiration, we develop a universal solar steam-generation device from wasted rice straw for robust clean water production. The upper leaves of rice straw are carbonized and composited with bacterial cellulose to function as a superior light absorber and the lower culms are designed as excellent water pumps. The unique capillary structures and multilevel geometrical structures of the rice culms contribute to their outstanding water pumping capacity for surface evaporation, resulting in an evaporation rate of 1.2 kg m-2 h-1 with 75.8% conversion efficiency. The rice straw-derived solar still has a daily clean water yield of 6.4-7.9 kg m-2 on sunny days and 4.6-5.6 kg m-2 on cloudy days over 14 days of operation. More attention-grabbing aspect is that this evaporation device is applicable to various water-bearing media, for example, sand, soil, and seawater, to collect clean water with a stable evaporation performance, and the unique multilevel structures of the culms make great contribution to the unimpeded water channels. By turning
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/652941
UR - https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.9b00291
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85062837251&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.9b00291
DO - 10.1021/acsami.9b00291
M3 - Article
C2 - 30799599
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 11
SP - 10672
EP - 10679
JO - ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
IS - 11
ER -