Abstract

Solar-driven steam generation as a potential green technology has attracted extensive attention to solve the freshwater scarcity crisis. Photothermal materials as the key section of solar steam generation have been widely reported. However, there is still a challenge in developing easily prepared, environmental-friendly, and low-cost materials. Herein, the simple, scalable, and porous carbonized cotton was prepared as an evaporator to enhance solar-based evaporation, which has excellent light absorption ability in the range of the full spectrum (300–2,500 nm). Benefiting from 95% solar absorption and the pores between the cellulose tubes, the carbonized cotton heated by plate carbonization reaches a steam generation rate of 0.8 kg m−2 h−1, which is about 5 times that of untreated cotton. Compared with tube furnace carbonization, flat plate heating carbonization of cotton requires lower equipment requirements and does not need nitrogen protection and cleaning tar, and the photothermal conversion efficiencies of both are similar. In addition, carbonized cotton as an evaporator was heated up rapidly under 1 sun irradiation and reached a stable temperature in 20 s, greatly improving the photothermal conversion rate. Therefore, plate heating carbonized cotton provides a good idea for preparing solar photothermal conversion materials and a novel strategy for simplifying the production of biomass thermal evaporators.

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