TY - JOUR
T1 - Advancing water collection efficiency in hybrid solar evaporators
T2 - key factors, strategic innovations, and synergistic applications
AU - Irshad, Muhammad Sultan
AU - Arshad, Naila
AU - Maqsood, Ghazala
AU - Ahmed, Iftikhar
AU - Shakoor, Bushra
AU - Asghar, Muhammad Sohail
AU - Ghazanfar, Uzma
AU - Lin, Liangyou
AU - Shah, M. A.K.Yousaf
AU - Ahmed, Irshad
AU - Chen, Xia
AU - Wang, Jianying
AU - Yi, Chen
AU - Li, Jinhua
AU - Qian, Jingwen
AU - Li, Wenlu
AU - Said, Zafar
AU - Li, Hongrong
AU - Ho, Nang Xuan
AU - Wang, Hao
AU - Fan, Xiaochao
AU - Mushtaq, Naveed
AU - Dao, Van Duong
AU - Mei, Tao
AU - Wang, Xianbao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/7
Y1 - 2025/7
N2 - Solar-driven interfacial evaporation (SDIE) technique is a sustainable approach that utilizes solar energy to produce steam, thus addressing freshwater scarcity. Despite several earlier research investigations, claims beyond the theoretical limit were raised due to limitations in solar-to-vapor and condensate efficiency, which remain under debate. Even under superlative conditions, low condensate and energy losses persist, indicating that the system's efficiency will never reach > 100 %. This review primarily analyzes the theoretical values of evaporation rate, structural configurations, strategic approaches, and physical factors influencing condensate yields in the SDIE process. Using a theoretical energy distribution framework, this study identifies mechanisms driving conversion efficiency and condensate rate beyond equilibrium predictions, e.g., phase change process, and vapor-liquid equilibrium. Low water collection efficiency in condensation systems, driven by poor thermal management and inadequate surface designs, demands interfacial engineering strategies such as hydrophobic/hydrophilic coatings to enhance latent heat recovery and condensate yields, as briefly examined in this review. It emphasizes misconceptions about efficiencies beyond theoretical limits, purification challenges, and complementary applications while guiding researchers to provide plausible explanations for breakthroughs under specific and established reference conditions.
AB - Solar-driven interfacial evaporation (SDIE) technique is a sustainable approach that utilizes solar energy to produce steam, thus addressing freshwater scarcity. Despite several earlier research investigations, claims beyond the theoretical limit were raised due to limitations in solar-to-vapor and condensate efficiency, which remain under debate. Even under superlative conditions, low condensate and energy losses persist, indicating that the system's efficiency will never reach > 100 %. This review primarily analyzes the theoretical values of evaporation rate, structural configurations, strategic approaches, and physical factors influencing condensate yields in the SDIE process. Using a theoretical energy distribution framework, this study identifies mechanisms driving conversion efficiency and condensate rate beyond equilibrium predictions, e.g., phase change process, and vapor-liquid equilibrium. Low water collection efficiency in condensation systems, driven by poor thermal management and inadequate surface designs, demands interfacial engineering strategies such as hydrophobic/hydrophilic coatings to enhance latent heat recovery and condensate yields, as briefly examined in this review. It emphasizes misconceptions about efficiencies beyond theoretical limits, purification challenges, and complementary applications while guiding researchers to provide plausible explanations for breakthroughs under specific and established reference conditions.
KW - Condensation efficiency
KW - Hybrid solar evaporators
KW - Photothermal conversion
KW - Physical principles
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U2 - 10.1016/j.mser.2025.101018
DO - 10.1016/j.mser.2025.101018
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105006874384
SN - 0927-796X
VL - 165
JO - Materials Science and Engineering R: Reports
JF - Materials Science and Engineering R: Reports
M1 - 101018
ER -