1 research outputs found
Full-Spectrum Solar-to-Heat Conversion Membrane with Interfacial Plasmonic Heating Ability for High-Efficiency Desalination of Seawater
The current challenge in solar thermal
utilization is how to effectively
convert full-spectrum sunlight into directly available thermal energy
for applications at high conversion efficiency. Herein, we report
a novel strategy for the construction of large-area porous CuS/polyethylene
(PE) hybrid membrane as a superior interfacial plasmonic photothermal
material for high-efficiency solar thermal conversion to produce steam
generation off seawater. The single-layer CuS/PE membrane materials
have effective full-spectra sunlight absorption, excellent solar-to-heat
conversion ability, low thermal conductivity, good hydrophilicity,
and open micro/nanoscopic porosity for capillarity and self-floating,
etc. Impressively, a single piece of porous CuS/PE membrane under
one sun illumination can exhibit a superior conversion efficiency
of 63.9% from sunlight to heat of seawater evaporation. Meanwhile,
the plasmonic photothermal CuS/PE membrane can be recycled at least
20 times. Therefore, with the demonstrated convenient fabrication
process, low cost, and high evaporation efficiency, the single-layer
porous CuS/PE membrane materials offer great promise to convert sunlight
into thermal energy for practical applications of steam generation