posted on 2022-01-21, 16:07authored byMustakeem Mustakeem, Jehad K. El-Demellawi, M. Obaid, Fangwang Ming, Husam N. Alshareef, Noreddine Ghaffour
Clean
water supply in off-grid locations remains a stumbling stone
for socio-economic development in remote areas where solar energy
is abundant. In this regard, several technologies have already introduced
various solutions to the off-grid freshwater predicament; however,
most of them are either costly or complex to operate. Nonetheless,
photothermal membrane distillation (PMD) has emerged as a promising
candidate with great potential to be autonomously driven by solar
energy. Instead of using energy-intensive bulk feed heating in conventional
MD systems, PMD membranes can directly harvest the incident solar
light at the membrane interface as an alternative driving energy resource
for the desalination process. Because of its excellent photothermal
properties and stability in ionic environments, herein, Ti3C2Tx MXene
was coated onto commercial polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membranes
to allow for a self-heated PMD process. An average water vapor flux
of 0.77 kg/m2 h with an excellent temporal response under
intermitting lighting and a photothermal efficiency of 65.3% were
achieved by the PMD membrane under one-sun irradiation for a feed
salinity of 0.36 g/L. Naturally, the efficiency of the process decreased
with higher feed concentrations due to the reduction of the evaporation
rate and the scattering of incident sunlight toward the membrane photothermal
surface, especially at rates above 10 g/L. Notably, with such performance,
1 m2 of the MXene-coated PMD membrane can fulfill the recommended
daily potable water intake for a household, that is, ca. 6 L/day.