Janus Polypyrrole Nanobelt@Polyvinyl Alcohol Hydrogel Evaporator for Robust Solar-Thermal Seawater Desalination and Sewage Purification

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2021 Oct 6;13(39):46717-46726. doi: 10.1021/acsami.1c13584. Epub 2021 Sep 27.

Abstract

The state-of-the-art solar-thermal evaporators demonstrating high energy utilization efficiency, a high evaporation rate, and salt rejection are highly desirable in solar-driven low-energy water purification/harvesting. Herein, a novel Janus solar evaporator is constructed by loading polypyrrole (PPy) nanobelts on the polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) hydrogel. The PPy nanobelts present a high solar absorption of 98.3%, leading to a localized solar-thermal efficiency of 82.5% when insulated from bulk water by the PVA hydrogel. The porous PVA hydrogel and the hydrophilic PPy nanobelts enable the efficient three-dimensional water transport. Taking advantages of the synergistic effect in the water-energy nexus, the Janus PPy nanobelt@PVA hydrogel evaporator evaporates water with a high rate of 2.26 kg m-2 h-1 via 80.1% solar energy from 1 sun irradiance with a low PPy loading of ∼3 mg cm-2 even at a rate of 2.64 kg m-2 h-1 via 96.3% solar energy for a biomimetic conical evaporator. The Janus evaporator presents superior salt-resistant desalination and contaminant purification performance in seawater and sewage. Furthermore, a portable solar-thermal purifier equipped with the Janus evaporator desalts real seawater far above the drinking water standard with over a 99.9% salt rejection rate and eliminates 95.8% of chemical oxygen demand in real sewage, highlighting its potential for advanced clean water harvesting.

Keywords: polypyrrole nanobelt; salt rejection; seawater desalination; sewage purification; solar-thermal evaporation.