Abstract

Fog collection is a promising solution for mitigating the urgent water shortage around the world. Despite the delicate design of various bionic fog harvesting surfaces with prowess to enable fast fog capture and programmed water transport, achieving sustainable and efficient fog collection by regulating the macroscale surface refreshment efficacy remains rarely concerned yet is effective. Here, we proposed a bioinspired structural design to achieve significant improvement on the surface refreshment efficacy to 46.47%, nearly 5 times larger than that of conventional design. Specifically, we constructed superhydrophilic vein-like microchannels on a superhydrophobic brass surface by using laser texture technology and hydrothermal treatment. Our microchannel design acts as a "highway" for synergically transporting and converging the collected fog droplets, as well as rapidly refreshing large surface area for the subsequent fog collection, reminiscent of the leaf veins responsible for the persistent mass transport between plant tissues. The practical implementation also convinced our design of a maximum water collection efficiency of up to 506.67 mg cm-2 h-1 and a long-term performance stability within a 10 h test. Our design is generic to most of the fog harvesting materials, showing great application potential for efficient atmospheric fog collection.

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