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Nanoenabled Photothermal Materials for Clean Water Production

Muhammad Sultan Irshad, Naila Arshad, Xianbao Wang

2020Global Challenges117 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Solar-powered water evaporation is a primitive technology but interest has revived in the last five years due to the use of nanoenabled photothermal absorbers. The cutting-edge nanoenabled photothermal materials can exploit a full spectrum of solar radiation with exceptionally high photothermal conversion efficiency. Additionally, photothermal design through heat management and the hierarchy of smooth water-flow channels have evolved in parallel. Indeed, the integration of all desirable functions into one photothermal layer remains an essential challenge for an effective yield of clean water in remote-sensing areas. Some nanoenabled photothermal prototypes equipped with unprecedented water evaporation rates have been reported recently for clean water production. Many barriers and difficulties remain, despite the latest scientific and practical implementation developments. This Review seeks to inspire nanoenvironmental research communities to drive onward toward real-time solar-driven clean water production.

Topics & Concepts

Photothermal therapyProduction (economics)Clean waterMaterials scienceEnvironmental scienceNanotechnologyWaste managementEngineeringEconomicsMacroeconomicsSolar-Powered Water Purification MethodsSolar Thermal and Photovoltaic SystemsTiO2 Photocatalysis and Solar Cells
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