Abstract
Conversion of atmospheric water to sustainable and clean freshwater resources through MOF-based adsorbent has great potential for the renewable environmental industry. However, its daily water production is hampered by susceptibility to agglomeration, slow water evaporation efficiency, and limited water-harvesting capacity. Herein, a solar-assisted bimetallic MOF (BMOF)-derived fiber component that surmounts these limitations and exhibits both optimized water-collect capacity and short adsorption-desorption period is proposed. The proposed strategy involves utilizing bottom-up interface-induced assembly between carboxylated multi-walled carbon nanotube and hygroscopic BMOF on a multi-ply glass fiber support. The designed BMOF (MIL-100(Fe,Al)-3) skeleton constructed using bimetallic-node defect engineering exhibits a high specific surface area (1,535.28 m2/g) and pore volume (0.76 cm3/g), thereby surpassing the parent MOFs and other reported MOFs in capturing moisture. Benefiting from the hierarchical structure of fiber rods and the solar-driven self-heating interface of photothermal layer, the customized BMOF crystals realize efficient loading and optimized water adsorption-desorption kinetics. As a result, the resultant fiber components achieve six adsorption-desorption cycles per day and an impressive water collection of 1.45 g/g/day under medium-high humidity outdoor conditions. Therefore, this work will provide new ideas for optimizing the daily yield of atmospheric water harvesting techniques. © 2024 Elsevier Ltd.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 121872 |
| Journal | Water Research |
| Volume | 259 |
| Online published | 3 Jun 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Aug 2024 |
Funding
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 51536003 ), and City University of Hong Kong (Grant No. 7020100 ). The author thank Qian Liu from Shiyanjia Lab (www.Shiyanjia.conm) for the TEM observation.
Research Keywords
- Atmospheric water collection
- Bimetallic-node defect engineering
- Monolithic desiccant
- Optimized water kinetics
- Solar-driven self-heating interface