With the exponentially rapid development of solar-driven interfacial evaporation, evaporators with both high evaporation efficiency and recyclability are highly desirable to alleviate resource waste and environmental problems but remain challenging.… Click to show full abstract
With the exponentially rapid development of solar-driven interfacial evaporation, evaporators with both high evaporation efficiency and recyclability are highly desirable to alleviate resource waste and environmental problems but remain challenging. Here, a monolithic evaporator was developed based on a dynamic disulfide vitrimer (a covalently cross-linked polymer network with associative exchangeable covalent bonds). Two types of solar absorbers, carbon nanotubes and oligoanilines, were simultaneously introduced to enhance the optical absorption. A high evaporation efficiency of 89.2% was achieved at 1 sun (1 kW m-2). When the evaporator was applied to solar desalination, it shows self-cleaning performance with long-term stability. Drinkable water with low ion concentrations satisfying the drinkable water levels of the World Health Organization and a high output (8.66 kg m-2, 8 h per day) was obtained, revealing great potential for practical seawater desalination. Moreover, a high-performance film material was obtained from the used evaporator via simple hot-pressing, indicating excellent fully closed-loop recyclability of the evaporator. This work provides a promising platform for high-efficiency and recyclable solar-driven interfacial evaporators.
               
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