"We hope that for countries where there is ample sunlight, such as India, you'll be able to take some dirty water, evaporate it using our material, and collect fresh water," said Srikanth Singamaneni, associate professor at Washington University.
The new approach combines bacteria-produced cellulose and graphene oxide - hailed as a wonder material - to form a bi-layered biofoam.
"The nanoscale cellulose fibre network produced by bacteria has excellent ability to move the water from the bulk to the evaporative surface while minimising the heat coming down, and the entire thing is produced in one shot," said Singamaneni.
"When you suspend this entire thing on water, the water is actually able to reach the top surface where evaporation happens," he added.
Also Read
"Light radiates on top of it, and it converts into heat because of the graphene oxide - but the heat dissipation to the bulk water underneath is minimised by the pristine nanocellulose layer," said Singamaneni.
"You don't want to waste the heat; you want to confine the heat to the top layer where the evaporation is actually happening," he said.
The process in which the bi-layered biofoam is actually formed is also novel. In the same way an oyster makes a pearl, the bacteria forms layers of nanocellulose fibers in which the graphene oxide flakes get embedded.
"While we are culturing the bacteria for the cellulose, we added the graphene oxide flakes into the medium itself," said Qisheng Jiang, a graduate student in the Singamaneni lab.
"That produces the next layer of our foam. The interface is very strong; mechanically, it is quite robust," he said.
The new biofoam is also extremely light and inexpensive to make, making it a viable tool for water purification and desalination.
"Cellulose can be produced on a massive scale, and graphene oxide is extremely cheap - people can produce tonnes of it," Singamaneni said.
"The properties of this foam material that we synthesised has characteristics that enhances solar energy harvesting," said Pratim Biswas, professor at Washington Univsersity.