Water scarcity remains a grand challenge across the globe. Sorption-based atmospheric water harvesting (SAWH) is an emerging and promising solution for water scarcity, especially in arid and noncoastal regions. Traditional approaches to AWH such as fog harvesting and dewing are often not applicable in an arid environment (<30% relative humidity (RH)), whereas SAWH has demonstrated great potential to provide fresh water under a wide range of climate conditions. Despite advances in materials development, most demonstrated SAWH devices still lack sufficient water production. In this work, we focus on the adsorption bed design to achieve high water production, multicyclic operation, and a compact form factor (high material loading per heat source contact area). The modeling efforts and experimental validation illustrate an optimized design space with a fin-array adsorption bed enabled by high-density waste heat, which promises 5.826 Lwater kgsorbent-1 day-1 at 30% RH within a compact 1 L adsorbent bed and commercial adsorbent materials.
CITATION STYLE
Li, X., El Fil, B., Li, B., Graeber, G., Li, A. C., Zhong, Y., … Lin, E. (2024). Design of a Compact Multicyclic High-Performance Atmospheric Water Harvester for Arid Environments. ACS Energy Letters, 9(7), 3391–3399. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsenergylett.4c01061
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