npj Clean Water (Nov 2023)

Scalable and high throughput photothermal water disinfection with negligible CO2 footprint utilizing nanostructured carbon coatings

  • Ananya Sah,
  • Atindra Kanti Mandal,
  • Shubham Tiwari,
  • Soumyo Mukherji,
  • Chandramouli Subramaniam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-023-00284-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Water heating and disinfection with reduced energy and CO2 footprint demands new and efficient materials for solar-thermal conversion technologies. Here, we demonstrate nanostructured porous hard-carbon florets (NCF) as effective solar absorber coating achieving excellent photon thermalization efficiency (87%). Functional NCF coating on three-dimensionally tapered helical solar receivers generate high surface temperatures (up to 95 °C). Such ‘green-heat’ is channeled to heat water up to 82 °C that simultaneously results in water disinfection through thermal shock. Untreated lake-water with high turbidity (5 NTU), high bacterial load (106 CFU mL−1) and pathogenic fungi is effectively disinfected in a continuous flow process. Translating this, a fully automated SWAP prototype (solar water antimicrobial purifier), delivers bacteria free hot water at an output capacity of 42 L m−2 day−1 with the lowest CO2 footprint (5 kg L−1) in comparison to all other existing approaches (>40 kg L−1).