Water scarcity is one of the most pressing issues of
contemporary
societal development that requires innovative technologies where the
material not only harvests water but also plays an active role in
the process. Here, we demonstrate a highly efficient optical self-sensing
approach to humidity capture from the air, where both humidity-harvesting
and water-transduction functionalities are imparted on slender organic
crystals by partial silanization via layer-by-layer hybridization.
We report that due to the integration of the harvesting of aerial
moisture and the collection of the condensed water, the ensuing Janus-type
crystals capture humidity with the highest-to-date water collection
efficiency of 15.96 ± 0.63 g cm–2 h–1. The water-collecting elements are also capable of delivering the
water by reversible and periodic elastic deformation, and their high
optical transparency allows real-time monitoring of the periodic fog
collection process by deformational modulation of passively or actively
transduced light that outcouples at the crystal-droplet interface.
The results could inspire sophisticated approaches to humidity harvesting
where optically transparent crystals combine fog capture with self-sensing
capabilities for continuous and optimized operation to maximize the
cost-gain balance of aerial fog capture.