A hydrophilic carbon foam/molybdenum disulfide composite as a self-floating solar evaporator.
Ali Mohseni AhangarMohammad Ali HedayatiMahdi MalekiHajar GhanbariAlireza ValanezhadIkuya WatanabePublished in: RSC advances (2023)
Solar-driven interfacial evaporation has gained increasing attention as an emerging and sustainable technology for wastewater treatment and desalinization. The carbon/molybdenum disulfide (C/MoS 2 ) composite has attracted more attention due to its outstanding light absorption capability and optoelectronic properties as a solar steam generator. However, the hydrophobic nature of carbon and MoS 2 -based materials hinders their wettability, which is crucial to the effective and facile operation of a solar generator of steam. Herein, a pH-controlled hydrothermal method was utilized to deposit a promising photothermal MoS 2 coating on melamine-derived carbon foams (CFs). The hydrophilic CF/MoS 2 composite, which can easily be floatable on the water surface, is a high-efficiency solar steam evaporator with a rapid increase in temperature under photon irradiation. Due to the localized heat confinement effect, the self-floating composite foam on the surface of water has the potential to produce a significant temperature differential. The porous structure effectively facilitates fast water vapor escape, leading to an impressively high evaporation efficiency of 94.5% under a light intensity of 1000 W m -2 .
Keyphrases
- quantum dots
- wastewater treatment
- reduced graphene oxide
- high efficiency
- highly efficient
- room temperature
- working memory
- visible light
- ionic liquid
- transition metal
- antibiotic resistance genes
- photodynamic therapy
- cystic fibrosis
- gold nanoparticles
- molecular dynamics simulations
- cancer therapy
- climate change
- risk assessment
- sensitive detection
- microbial community
- anaerobic digestion
- human health
- molecularly imprinted