AI Article Synopsis

  • The report highlights the efficiency of SbSe nanorods (NRs) in converting light to heat for solar thermal applications, achieving around 57.8% efficiency with specific lasers and heating hybrid membranes to ≈59°C in just 15 minutes.* -
  • Despite their advantages, SbSe NRs have a limited evaporation rate due to hydrophobicity, which restricts water movement to the heated areas, leading to less effective solar evaporation.* -
  • A new macro-channel imprinting technique improves water transport in these hybrid membranes, boosting evaporation efficiency to ≈148% under strong lighting and achieving effective heavy metal removal from water, meeting WHO standards for safe drinking water.*

Article Abstract

This report validates SbSe nanorods (NRs) as a potential contender for solar thermal heat generation. The water droplet experiment shows SbSe's light-to-heat conversion efficiency as ≈57.8% for red (671 nm), 58% for green (532 nm) lasers. Following this PVDF(M)/ SbSe NRs hybrid membranes for solar desalination reached ≈59°C in 15 minutes of illumination. The heat generation is dominated by an electron/hole-acoustic phonon scattering mechanism. Despite having superior visNIR absorption and heat localization in SbSe NRs, the hybrid membranes show an evaporation rate of 1.72 kg m h only, even if mass loading is increased. The hydrophobic SbSe NRs layer restricts water diffusion to hot zones, reducing solar evaporation efficiency. A novel macro channel imprinting strategy in hybrid membranes speeds up water transport to the hot zone. Consequently, optimized macro channel membranes achieve ≈2.37 kg m h mass loss and 148% solar evaporation efficiency under a 1000 W m mercury vapor lamp. Therefore, imprinting macro-channel can be a possible strategy, addressing the hydrophobic materials in desalination applications which can be expanded in other similar materials. Moreover, its outdoor sunlight application achieves impressive solar evaporation efficiency (≈108%). The steam generated effectively removes heavy metals, meeting World Health Organization (WHO) potable water standards.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202408293DOI Listing

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