| Literature DB >> 35364813 |
Yun Zhang1, Wenkai Zhu1, Chi Zhang2, Joseph Peoples1, Xuan Li1, Andrea Lorena Felicelli1, Xiwei Shan1, David M Warsinger1,3, Theodorian Borca-Tasciuc4, Xiulin Ruan1, Tian Li1.
Abstract
Atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) has received tremendous interest because of population growth, limited freshwater resources, and water pollution. However, key challenges remain in developing efficient, flexible, and lightweight AWH materials with scalability. Here, we demonstrated a radiative cooling fabric for AWH via its hierarchically structured cellulose network and hybrid sorption-dewing mechanisms. With 8.3% solar absorption and ∼0.9 infrared (IR) emissivity, the material can drop up to 7.5 °C below ambient temperature without energy consumption via radiative cooling. Water adsorption onto the hydrophilic functional groups of cellulose is dominated by sorption at low relative humidity (RH) and dewing at high RH. The cellulose network provides desirable mechanical properties with entangled high-aspect-ratio fibers over tens of adsorption-extraction cycles. In the field test, the cellulose sample exhibited water uptake of 1.29 kg/kg at 80% RH during the night. The profusion of radiative cooling fabric features desirable cost effectiveness and allows fast deployment into large-scale AWH applications.Entities:
Keywords: atmospheric water harvesting; cellulose; energy efficiency; large scale; radiative cooling; sustainability
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35364813 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c04143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189