Evaporation-driven electrokinetic energy conversion: critical review, parametric analysis and perspectives
Andriy Yaroshchuk

TL;DR
This paper critically reviews the coupling of evaporation processes with electrokinetic phenomena in nanoporous materials, proposing models and analyzing experimental data to advance energy harvesting technologies.
Contribution
It combines knowledge from evaporation and electrokinetics to model energy conversion in nanoporous systems, highlighting gaps and future research directions.
Findings
Experimental data sometimes contradict model predictions.
Conversion mechanisms differ from classical electrokinetic energy conversion.
Performance correlates with nanoporous structure and surface properties.
Abstract
Energy harvesting from evaporation has become a hot topic in the last couple of years. Researchers have speculated on several possible mechanisms. Electrokinetic energy conversion is the least hypothetical one. The basics of pressure-driven electrokinetic phenomena of streaming current and streaming potential have long been established. The regularities of evaporation from porous media are also well known. However, coupling of these two classes of phenomena has not, yet, been seriously explored. In this critical review, we will recapitalize and combine the available knowledge from these two fields to produce a coherent picture of electrokinetic electricity generation during evaporation from (nano)porous materials. For illustration, we will consider several configurations, namely, single nanopores, arrays of nanopores, systems with reduced area of electrokinetic-conversion elements and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar-Powered Water Purification Methods · Nanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies · Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
