# Biomimetic All-Wood Sponge for the Co-Generation of Adsorption-Based Atmospheric Water Harvesting and Hydrovoltaic Power Generation

**Authors:** Haoyu Ma, Shengnan Li, Shaowei Wang, Weisheng Yang, Jingquan Han

PMC · DOI: 10.34133/research.1195 · 2026-03-24

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a sustainable wood-based sponge that simultaneously harvests water from the air and generates electricity using sunlight.

## Contribution

A novel biomimetic all-wood sponge is developed for co-generating water and electricity with low energy and environmental sustainability.

## Key findings

- The sponge achieves an open-circuit voltage of ~430 mV and water uptake of ~1.45 g g−1 under 60% humidity and 1-sun illumination.
- The device maintains stable performance over multiple adsorption–desorption cycles and can power small electronics outdoors.
- The wood-based structure is low-cost, sustainable, and scalable for water and energy production in resource-limited areas.

## Abstract

Atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) has garnered widespread attention for the alleviation of freshwater scarcity. However, AWH still presents challenges in simultaneously achieving rapid adsorption–desorption, low-energy regeneration, and environmentally sustainable development. Herein, a biomimetic all-biomass double-layer sponge is prepared to spatially separate moisture capture from solar-driven desorption while integrating hydrovoltaic power generation (HG) for the co-production of water and electricity. Inspired by tree transpiration, the carboxylated wood scaffold loaded with LiCl mimics root-like moisture uptake, while the recycled demethylated lignin coated on the upper layer serves as a photothermal evaporation layer that drives efficient solar-induced desorption analogous to leaf-mediated sunlight absorption. The biomimetic double-layer structure enables efficient moisture absorption and desorption, with vertical humidity gradients guiding water through directional fiber microchannels and generating sustained flow potentials. Under 60% relative humidity (RH), 25 °C, and 1-sun illumination, the open-circuit voltage (Voc) of the double-layer wood sponge is ~430 mV, with a short-circuit current (Isc) of ~6.3 μA and water uptake capacity of ~1.45 g g−1, maintaining stable properties over multiple adsorption–desorption cycles. Under simulated conditions outdoors, freshwater can be effectively harvested, while the generated electricity can power lighting or be stored in capacitors to supply commercial electronic devices. In this strategy, the natural cellulose–lignin structure within wood is restructured and repurposed into a low-cost, sustainable platform that supplies both freshwater and environmental energy, providing a scalable pathway for efficient collection of water resources in resource-constrained regions.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** LiCl (PubChem CID 433294)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** Water (MESH:D014867), cellulose (MESH:D002482), LiCl (MESH:D018021), lignin (MESH:D008031)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13009533/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13009533