posted on 2024-11-22, 08:10authored byShumiao Li, Ji Liu, Changjun Li, Xiaoyang Fang, Xin Wang, Lin Tian, Zhong-Zhen Yu, Xiaofeng Li
Hydrogels have been identified as a promising material
platform
for solar-driven interfacial evaporation. However, designing durable
hydrogel solar evaporators that can combine effective photothermal
conversion, superior water transport, salt resistance, and robust
mechanical properties to ensure stable and efficient evaporation remains
a significant challenge. Herein, a robust and antifouling hydrogel-based
solar evaporator composed of poly(vinyl alcohol), sodium alginate,
and MXene is successfully constructed through directional freeze-casting
and salting-out processes. The directional freeze-casting aids in
forming vertically aligned, well-interconnected channels within the
hydrogel that facilitate rapid upward water transfer and effective
salt ion discharging, while the optimized salting-out process promotes
the cross-linking of polymer chains, creating a sponge-like porous
structure that enhances key mechanical properties such as high elasticity
and exceptional flexibility. The developed hydrogel evaporator achieves
an impressive evaporation rate of 2.53 kg m–2 h–1 with an energy efficiency of 93%, as well as excellent
salt resistance and long-term evaporation stability even when desalinating
high-concentration brines. These exceptional characteristics make
this composite hydrogel evaporator highly suitable for practical applications
in seawater desalination and wastewater purification.