| Literature DB >> 28511003 |
Junlong Yang1,2, Yunsong Pang1, Weixin Huang3,4, Scott K Shaw4, Jarrod Schiffbauer1, Michelle Anne Pillers4, Xin Mu1, Shirui Luo1, Teng Zhang1, Yajiang Huang2, Guangxian Li2, Sylwia Ptasinska3, Marya Lieberman4, Tengfei Luo1,5.
Abstract
The ability to efficiently utilize solar thermal energy to enable liquid-to-vapor phase transition has great technological implications for a wide variety of applications, such as water treatment and chemical fractionation. Here, we demonstrate that functionalizing graphene using hydrophilic groups can greatly enhance the solar thermal steam generation efficiency. Our results show that specially functionalized graphene can improve the overall solar-to-vapor efficiency from 38% to 48% at one sun conditions compared to chemically reduced graphene oxide. Our experiments show that such an improvement is a surface effect mainly attributed to the more hydrophilic feature of functionalized graphene, which influences the water meniscus profile at the vapor-liquid interface due to capillary effect. This will lead to thinner water films close to the three-phase contact line, where the water surface temperature is higher since the resistance of thinner water film is smaller, leading to more efficient evaporation. This strategy of functionalizing graphene to make it more hydrophilic can be potentially integrated with the existing macroscopic heat isolation strategies to further improve the overall solar-to-vapor conversion efficiency.Entities:
Keywords: functionalized graphene; high efficiency evaporation; hydrophilic groups; solar steam generation; vapor−liquid interface
Year: 2017 PMID: 28511003 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b00367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881