Environmentally adaptive MOF-based device enables continuous self-optimizing atmospheric water harvesting

Nat Commun. 2022 Aug 19;13(1):4873. doi: 10.1038/s41467-022-32642-0.

Abstract

Harvesting water vapor from desert, arid environments by metal-organic framework (MOF) based devices to deliver clean liquid water is critically dependent on environment and climate conditions. However, reported devices have yet been developed to adapt in real-time to such conditions during their operation, which severely limits water production efficiency and unnecessarily increases power consumption. Herein, we report and detail a mode of water harvesting operation, termed 'adaptive water harvesting', from which a MOF-based device is proven capable of adapting the adsorption and desorption phases of its water harvesting cycle to weather fluctuations throughout a given day, week, and month such that its water production efficiency is continuously optimized. In performance evaluation experiments in a desert, arid climate (17-32% relative humidity), the adaptive water harvesting device achieves a 169% increase in water production (3.5 LH2O kgMOF-1 d-1) when compared to the best-performing, reported active device (0.7-1.3 LH2O kgMOF-1 d-1 at 10-32% relative humidity), a lower power consumption (1.67-5.25 kWh LH2O-1), and saves time by requiring nearly 1.5 cycles less than a counterpart active device. Furthermore, the produced water meets the national drinking standards of a potential technology-adopting country.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Desert Climate
  • Metal-Organic Frameworks*
  • Steam
  • Sunlight

Substances

  • Metal-Organic Frameworks
  • Steam