JOURNAL ARTICLE

Autonomous Atmospheric Water Harvesting over a Wide RH Range Enabled by Super Hygroscopic Composite Aerogels

Abstract

Abstract Sorption‐based atmospheric water harvesting (SAWH) offers a sustainable strategy to address the global freshwater shortage. However, obtaining sorbents with excellent performance over a wide relative humidity (RH) range and devices with fully autonomous water production remains challenging. Herein, magnesium chloride (MgCl 2 ) is innovatively converted into super hygroscopic magnesium complexes(MC), which can effectively solve the problems of salt deliquescence and agglomeration. The MC are then integrated with photothermal aerogels composed of sodium alginate and carbon nanotubes (SA/CNTs) to form composite aerogels, which showed high water uptake over a wide RH range, reaching 5.43 and 0.27 kg kg −1 at 95% and 20% RH, respectively. The hierarchical porous structure enables the as‐prepared SA/CNTs/MC to exhibit rapid absorption/desorption kinetics with 12 cycles per day at 70% RH, equivalent to a water yield of 10.0 L kg −1 day −1 . To further realize continuous and practical freshwater production, a fully solar‐driven autonomous atmospheric water generator is designed and constructed with two SA/CNTs/MC‐based absorption layers, which can alternately conduct the water absorption/desorption process without any other energy consumption. The design provides a promising approach to achieving autonomous, high‐performance, and scalable SAWH.

Keywords:
Materials science Carbon nanotube Chemical engineering Relative humidity Absorption (acoustics) Desorption Composite number Sorption Magnesium Nanotechnology Composite material Adsorption Metallurgy Chemistry Organic chemistry

Metrics

57
Cited By
10.46
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Solar-Powered Water Purification Methods
Physical Sciences →  Energy →  Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Adsorption and Cooling Systems
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Surfaces, Coatings and Films
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.