Simple, low-cost, and high-performance atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) still remains challenging in the context of global water shortage. Here, we present a simple and low-cost macroporous hydrogel for high-performance AWH… Click to show full abstract
Simple, low-cost, and high-performance atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) still remains challenging in the context of global water shortage. Here, we present a simple and low-cost macroporous hydrogel for high-performance AWH to address this challenge. We employed an innovative strategy of pore foaming and vacuum drying to rationally fabricate a macroporous hydrogel. The hydrogel is endowed with a macroporous structure and a high specific surface area, enabling sufficient contact of the inner sorbent with outside air and high-performance AWH. The experiments demonstrate that macroporous hydrogels can achieve high-performance AWH with a broad range of sorption humidity [relative humidity (RH) from 100% to even lower than 20%], high water sorption capacity (highest 433.72% of hydrogel's own weight at ∼98% RH, 25 °C within 60 h), rapid vapor capturing (the sorption efficiency is as high as 0.32 g g-1 h-1 in the first 3 h at 90% RH, 25 °C), unique durability, low desorption temperature (∼50 °C, lowest), and high water-releasing rate (release 99.38% of the sorbed water under 500 W m-2 light for 6 h). The results show that this macroporous hydrogel can sorb water more than 193.46% of its own weight overnight (13 h) at a RH of ∼90%, 25 °C and release as high as 99.38% of the sorbed water via the photothermal effect. It is estimated that the daily water yield can reach up to approximately 2.56 kg kg-1 day-1 in real outdoor conditions, enabling daily minimum water consumption of an adult. Our simple, affordable, and easy-to-scale-up macroporous hydrogel can not only unleash the unlimited possibilities for large-scale and high-performance AWH but also offer promising opportunities for functional materials, soft matter, flexible electronics, tissue engineering, and biomedical applications.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.