Water scarcity is a growing global challenge, intensified by climate change, seawater intrusion, and pollution. While conventional desalination methods are energy-intensive, solar-driven interfacial evaporators offer a promising low-energy solution by leveraging solar energy for water evaporation, with the resulting steam condensed into purified water. Despite advancements, challenges persist, particularly in addressing volatile contaminants and biofouling, which can compromise long-term performance. The integration of photocatalysts into solar-driven interfacial evaporators has been proposed as a solution, enabling pollutant degradation and microbial inactivation while enhancing water transport and self-cleaning properties. This review critically assesses testing methodologies for solar-driven interfacial evaporators incorporating both photothermal and photocatalytic functions. While previous studies have examined materials and system design, the added complexity of photocatalysis necessitates new testing approaches. First, solar still setups are analyzed, particularly concentrating on the selection of materials and geometry for the transparent cover and water-collecting surfaces. Then, performance evaluation tests are discussed, with focus on the types of tested pollutants and analytical techniques. Finally, key challenges are presented, providing insights for future advancements in sustainable water purification.

Design Efficiency: A Critical Perspective on Testing Methods for Solar-Driven Photothermal Evaporation and Photocatalysis / H. Hamza, M.V. Diamanti, V. Lughi, S. Rossi, D. Meroni. - In: NANOMATERIALS. - ISSN 2079-4991. - 15:14(2025 Jul 18), pp. 1121.1-1121.19. [10.3390/nano15141121]

Design Efficiency: A Critical Perspective on Testing Methods for Solar-Driven Photothermal Evaporation and Photocatalysis

H. Hamza
Primo
;
S. Rossi
Penultimo
;
D. Meroni
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

Water scarcity is a growing global challenge, intensified by climate change, seawater intrusion, and pollution. While conventional desalination methods are energy-intensive, solar-driven interfacial evaporators offer a promising low-energy solution by leveraging solar energy for water evaporation, with the resulting steam condensed into purified water. Despite advancements, challenges persist, particularly in addressing volatile contaminants and biofouling, which can compromise long-term performance. The integration of photocatalysts into solar-driven interfacial evaporators has been proposed as a solution, enabling pollutant degradation and microbial inactivation while enhancing water transport and self-cleaning properties. This review critically assesses testing methodologies for solar-driven interfacial evaporators incorporating both photothermal and photocatalytic functions. While previous studies have examined materials and system design, the added complexity of photocatalysis necessitates new testing approaches. First, solar still setups are analyzed, particularly concentrating on the selection of materials and geometry for the transparent cover and water-collecting surfaces. Then, performance evaluation tests are discussed, with focus on the types of tested pollutants and analytical techniques. Finally, key challenges are presented, providing insights for future advancements in sustainable water purification.
No
English
desalination; environmental remediation; photocatalysis; photothermal; solar-driven steam;
Settore CHEM-02/A - Chimica fisica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 6: Clean water and sanitation
Goal 7: Affordable and clean energy
Goal 11: Sustainable cities and communities
   COmposite nanomaterials coupling Photothermal Evaporation and photocatalysis for durable water purification systems (COPE)
   COPE
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
   P2022TLMK7_001
18-lug-2025
MDPI
15
14
1121
1
19
19
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Design Efficiency: A Critical Perspective on Testing Methods for Solar-Driven Photothermal Evaporation and Photocatalysis / H. Hamza, M.V. Diamanti, V. Lughi, S. Rossi, D. Meroni. - In: NANOMATERIALS. - ISSN 2079-4991. - 15:14(2025 Jul 18), pp. 1121.1-1121.19. [10.3390/nano15141121]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
5
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
H. Hamza, M.V. Diamanti, V. Lughi, S. Rossi, D. Meroni
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1192935
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