Desalination of seawater with zero-liquid discharge is a major challenge. Here we developed a three-dimensional "umbrella" architecture to evaporate hypersaline brines of up to 20 wt% using solar-driven interfacial evaporation. By controlling the water pathway and the thickness of the evaporator films to manipulate the salt capacitance of the system, a stable evaporation rate of >2.6 kg m À2 h À1 was achieved over 4-day operation in the laboratory environment with minimized salt accumulation on evaporation surfaces. By placing the system in an outdoor environment with natural wind, the peak evaporation rate was improved to 9.05 kg m À2 h À1 . After a 4-day outdoor test, the total evaporated water by the umbrella system was 3.7Â more than the natural evaporation from a bulk water surface under identical environmental conditions. The predesigned water flow also controlled the local salt accumulation, resulting in easier salt removing and collection, which is highly desired for accelerated salt mining applications.
We reveal a three-dimensional “umbrella” architecture to evaporate hypersaline brines using solar-thermal effects. A stable evaporation rate of >2.6 kg m-2h-1 was achieved over a 4-day operation with minimized salt accumulation on evaporation surfaces.
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