Plasmonic Wood for High‐Efficiency Solar Steam Generation

Mingwei Zhu(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Yiju Li(University of Maryland, College Park), Fengjuan Chen(University of Maryland, College Park), Xue-Yi Zhu(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Jiaqi Dai(University of Maryland, College Park), Yongfeng Li(University of Maryland, College Park), Zhi Yang(University of Maryland, College Park), Xuejun Yan(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Jianwei Song(University of Maryland, College Park), Yanbin Wang(University of Maryland, College Park), Emily Hitz(University of Maryland, College Park), Wei Luo(University of Maryland, College Park), Minhui Lu(Collaborative Innovation Center of Advanced Microstructures), Bao Yang(University of Maryland, College Park), Liangbing Hu(University of Maryland, College Park)
Advanced Energy Materials
September 28, 2017
Cited by 933

Abstract

Abstract Plasmonic metal nanoparticles are a category of plasmonic materials that can efficiently convert light into heat under illumination, which can be applied in the field of solar steam generation. Here, this study designs a novel type of plasmonic material, which is made by uniformly decorating fine metal nanoparticles into the 3D mesoporous matrix of natural wood (plasmonic wood). The plasmonic wood exhibits high light absorption ability (≈99%) over a broad wavelength range from 200 to 2500 nm due to the plasmonic effect of metal nanoparticles and the waveguide effect of microchannels in the wood matrix. The 3D mesoporous wood with numerous low‐tortuosity microchannels and nanochannels can transport water up from the bottom of the device effectively due to the capillary effect. As a result, the 3D aligned porous architecture can achieve a high solar conversion efficiency of 85% under ten‐sun illumination (10 kW m −2 ). The plasmonic wood also exhibits superior stability for solar steam generation, without any degradation after being evaluated for 144 h. Its high conversion efficiency and excellent cycling stability demonstrate the potential of newly developed plasmonic wood to solar energy‐based water desalination.


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