posted on 2022-09-02, 13:12authored byManpreet Kaur, Tadaaki Nagao
Environmental energy harvesting holds great promise for
sustainable
development of society. Today, there are many kinds of available energy
sources, such as hydropower, nuclear energy, thermal power, etc.,
but all of these suffer from requiring massive infrastructure investment,
producing environmental pollution, and/or having the potential to
experience catastrophic failure. In this review, we introduce novel
methodology for harvesting energy, using evaporation of water from
three-dimensional porous media, low-dimensional nanotubes, or microfibrous
structures. We can produce fresh water driven by harnessing sunlight
and can generate hydroelectric power via water transpiration. The
former is driven by nanoscale photothermal heating, which induces
rapid evaporation of water, while its bulk remains near room temperature.
The latter is coupled with mass transport of water comprising ions
that are condensed adjacent to the charged surface of the porous or
fibrous media. These proposed schemes are clean, simple, and useful,
which can be employed anywhere, because they operate as a result of
spontaneous capillary action of water, solar power, or coulombic attraction
occurring at the water–solid interface. The low-cost micro-
and nanostructured materials presented here are readily available,
suitable for securing potable water, and offer ubiquitous, clean,
permanent energy sources for self-powered sensor networks and night-time
energy harvesters that do not require energy inputs.