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Active Surface Area-Dependent Water Harvesting of Desert Beetle-Inspired Hybrid Wetting Surfaces

C. G. Jothi Prakash, Jeong‐Won Lee

2024Langmuir21 citationsDOI

Abstract

The increasing frequency of water scarcity is an acute worldwide problem. Nature-inspired water harvesting from fog is an important method to obtain freshwater in arid areas. Existing literature reports varied and diversified results in water harvesting capacity by employing a biphilic surface with control over hydrophilic and hydrophobic patterns. In this study, we first demonstrate a facile and scalable method to fabricate a biphilic surface using a simple electroless etching and desilanization technique. Considering the nucleation, growth, and transport of condensate, biphilic surfaces with controlled active surface area of hydrophilic spots were given special attention. We studied the water collection performance of pattern shape with its associated active surface area and further evaluated the critical surface area beyond which the water collection efficiency decreases. A high water collection capacity of 2050 mg cm –2 h –1 was achieved, and the hydrophilic active area-engineered surface retained its efficiency even after 50 test cycles. We further demonstrate high collection efficiency with a square pattern compared to a triangular path-like-patterned surface. The observations and surface engineering strategies reported in this study can provide insights into efficient and sustainable water harvesting devices.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceWettingSurface waterNucleationEnvironmental scienceNanotechnologyAridChemical engineeringEnvironmental engineeringComposite materialChemistryGeologyOrganic chemistryEngineeringPaleontologySurface Modification and SuperhydrophobicityAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsSolar-Powered Water Purification Methods
Active Surface Area-Dependent Water Harvesting of Desert Beetle-Inspired Hybrid Wetting Surfaces | Litcius