Issue 4, 2025

Superthermal solar interfacial evaporation is not due to reduced latent heat of water

Abstract

To explain reported solar interfacial-evaporation rates from porous materials beyond an apparent 100% efficiency using the thermal evaporation mechanism, many publications hypothesize that intermediate water inside porous materials has a reduced latent heat. Key supporting evidence is that water-only surfaces have lower natural evaporation rates than porous evaporators, with the ratio of the two rates taken as the latent heat reduction. Through simulations and experiments, we study natural evaporation of water and show that reported differences in evaporation rates between porous materials and water are likely due to experimental error from recessed evaporating surfaces. A few millimeter recession of the water surface relative to the container lip can drop evaporation rates by over 50% due to a stagnant air layer, suggesting that the comparative experiments are prone to error. Furthermore, in the reduced latent heat picture, interfacial cooling must occur at the porous sample–water interface due to the enthalpy difference between bulk water and intermediate water. Our transport modeling shows that reduced latent heat cannot explain superthermal evaporation and that new mechanistic directions need to be pursued.

Graphical abstract: Superthermal solar interfacial evaporation is not due to reduced latent heat of water

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 nov 2024
Accepted
13 jan 2025
First published
14 jan 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Energy Environ. Sci., 2025,18, 1707-1721

Superthermal solar interfacial evaporation is not due to reduced latent heat of water

J. H. Zhang, R. Mittapally, G. Lv and G. Chen, Energy Environ. Sci., 2025, 18, 1707 DOI: 10.1039/D4EE05591H

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