Abstract
To address the global freshwater crisis, the development of hydrophobic photothermal membranes for solar-driven membrane distillation has gained significant attention. In this work, a novel one-step spray-assisted nonsolvent induced phase separation (SANIPS) method was developed to fabricate poly(vinylidene fluoride)/multi-walled carbon nanotube (PVDF/MWCNT) photothermal membranes. The SANIPS process enables the formation of a bicontinuous porous structure, which simultaneously provides high hydrophobicity (water contact angle > 140°), large porosity, and enhanced light-trapping through multiple internal reflections. The optimized PVDF-0.2%CNT membrane exhibited efficient photothermal conversion, reaching a surface temperature of 55.70 °C under 1 sun irradiation, approximately 25 °C higher than its unmodified counterpart. In photothermal membrane distillation tests using a 3.5 wt% NaCl feed under 1 sun irradiation, this membrane achieved a high water flux of 1.37 kg·m−2·h−1 and an overall photothermal conversion efficiency of 85.91% under optimized conditions while maintaining salt rejection above 99.99%. This work demonstrates that the SANIPS strategy offers a scalable and integrated approach to design high-performance photothermal membranes, presenting a promising route toward energy-efficient and sustainable solar-driven desalination.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 120236 |
| Journal | Desalination |
| Volume | 631 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Aug 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Bicontinuous porous structure
- Photothermal membrane distillation
- PVDF/MWCNT membranes
- Solar-driven desalination
- Spray-assisted nonsolvent induced phase separation (SANIPS)
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