Abstract

Biomaterial-based solar-driven evaporation has great potential for wastewater treatment and seawater desalination with a high energy conversion and utilization efficiency. However, technology gaps still exist for effectively and directly applying multiscale structures and intrinsic water transport channels of natural materials to enhance high-efficiency photothermal evaporation. In this study, a high-performance biomass-derived photothermal evaporative material was obtained using Salvinia natans, a common aquatic floating plant, together with simple poly(m-phenylenediamine) oxidation modification, building a hybrid biomass evaporator. With advantageous natural features of adequate water transport, microscale-nanoscale hierarchical structures, effective water activation, and antisalt-fouling function, the hybrid biomass evaporator achieves a high evaporation rate of 2.24 kg m-2 h-1 under one sun radiation (1 kW m-2). In addition, modified Salvinia natans also demonstrate certain ability to remove heavy metals during the photothermal evaporation of wastewater. This work offers a new perspective on the synthesis of an environmentally friendly and cost-effective solar-driven evaporator material, which has the advantages of low cost, simple process, and high photothermal conversion efficiency, and can be widely applied to seawater desalination and the treatment of wastewater with high salt concentrations.

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