Physicists develop new material for water desalination_titanium dioxide 2196 DATE: 2022-06-27 13:08:31
February 1, 2021
Physicists develop new material for water desalination
by Far Eastern Federal University

Titanium dioxide nanoparticles with gold absorb about 96% of the solar spectrum and turn it into heat. The material can accelerate the evaporation in desalination plants up to 2.5 times and can track hazardous molecules and compounds. An international research team with representatives from Far Eastern Federal University (FEFU), ITMO University, and the Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, published a related article in ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces.
Access to safe water is included in the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals. Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Children's Fund (UNICEF) addressed the problem in a 2019 report, noting that 2.2 billion people lack access to safe drinking water.
One of the ways to provide clean drinking water is to desalinate seawater by evaporation and subsequent concentration of steam. To achieve greater production, new materials to accelerate evaporation are desired. Over the past five years, this has become a rapidly growing research field globally.
Such innovative materials were designed by FEFU, FEB RAS, and ITMO University scientists teamed up with colleagues from Spain, Japan, Bulgaria, and Belarus. Researchers claim it can be used as a nano-heater for water evaporation and as an optical detector in sensor systems tracking the smallest traces of various substances in a liquid. Later properties can be relevant for micro-fluid biomedical systems, lab-on-chips, and environmental monitoring of pollutants, antibiotics, or viruses in water.
"Upon laser irradiation, the initially crystalline titanium dioxide became completely amorphous acquiring strong and broadband light absorption properties. Decoration and doping of the material by gold nanoclusters additionally facilitated visible light absorption. Initially, we intended to use the feature in the context of solar energy but quickly realized that due to the new amorphous structure nanoparticles in the active layer of solar cells will convert the absorbed solar energy into heat rather than electricity. But the idea came to use it as a kind of nano heater in a desalination tank, which was successfully done in laboratory conditions," says one of the authors of the paper Alexander Kuchmizhak, a senior researcher at the Institute of Automation and Control Processes of the FEB RAS.
The material was obtained through a simple and environmentally friendly technology of laser ablation in a liquid.
"We added titanium dioxide nanopowders to a liquid containing gold ions and irradiated the mixture with laser pulses of the visible spectrum. The method does not require expensive equipment, hazardous chemicals and can be easily optimized to synthesize unique nanomaterial at gram per hour rate," said research participant Stanislav Gurbatov, junior researcher at FEFU Polytechnic Institute (School).
Of note, the initial nanoparticles of titanium dioxide do not absorb visible laser radiation. However, they catalyze the formation of nanosized gold clusters on their surface stimulating further melting of titanium dioxide. Several hybrid nanoparticles fuse forming unique nanomorphology, in which gold nanoclusters are located both inside and on the surface of titanium dioxide.
Au-decorated amorphous titanium dioxide nanopowder appears completely black to the human eye since it efficiently absorbs light within the entire visible light spectrum like a black hole in space does and converts it into heat. In sharp contrast, the commercial titanium dioxide powder used as a starting material, is white.
The development of new materials, including those supporting new manageable physical principles for a wide range of applications, consists within priority areas of FEFU which scientists are working on in close partnership with the Russian Academy of Sciences, domestic and foreign colleagues.
Explore further
Scientists create new nanocomposite from gold and titanium oxideMore information:Stanislav O. Gurbatov et al, Black Au-Decorated TiO2Produced via Laser Ablation in Liquid, ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces(2021). DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c20463 Journal information:ACS Applied Materials and InterfacesProvided by Far Eastern Federal University Citation: Physicists develop new material for water desalination (2021, February 1) retrieved 14 January 2022 from https://phys.org/news/2021-02-physicists-material-desalination.html This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only. 19 shares
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Feedback to editors
- Featured
- Last Comments
- Popular
Model suggests vertical winds could push bacteria to an altitude beyond 120km
14 hours ago
0
Messier 85's complex globular cluster system explored by researchers
16 hours ago
0
Mix of beer-like drink with psychotropics suggests Wari elites used drugs for political advantage
Jan 12, 2022
0
Model suggests differences between near and far side of moon due to cosmic impact millions of years ago
Jan 12, 2022
0
Scientific Integrity Task Force releases "Protecting the Integrity of Government Science" report
Jan 12, 2022
0

Team of astronomers finds widest separation of brown dwarf pair to date
9 hours ago

Unusual team finds gigantic planet hidden in plain sight
9 hours ago

Fuzzy molecular threesome is basis of gene expression
10 hours ago

New photonic technology effect could speed drug development
10 hours ago

Study reveals how to break symmetry in colloidal crystals
10 hours ago

Two new species of freshwater goby fish discovered in the Philippines
10 hours ago

Martian meteorite's organic materials origin not biological, formed by geochemical interactions between water and rock
12 hours ago
Relevant PhysicsForums posts
Balancing Chemical Equations - Is RHS=LHS true always?
21 hours ago
How is the current density solved for in an electrolyzer unit?
Jan 11, 2022
Oxygen gas produced by a Solid element sodium hydroxide solution?
Jan 11, 2022
The shielding effect and effective nuclear charge
Jan 10, 2022
Very High Standard Deviation in Excitation Emission Matrix Measurement
Jan 07, 2022
Some coffees clog the coffee filter -- Why or how?
Jan 06, 2022
More from Chemistry