Charge transfer cocrystal hydrogels for solar-driven lithium extraction and water co-generation

Abstract

Lithium is a vital strategic resource for the modern energy transition. However, conventional adsorption methods are limited by slow extraction kinetics and substantial freshwater consumption. In this work, a lithium-extracting hydrogel (LEH) driven by a novel charge-transfer (CT) organic cocrystal (ATQ) is developed for interfacial solar evaporation-driven lithium extraction. ATQ cocrystals exhibit strong CT interactions, panchromatic absorption, and a high photothermal conversion efficiency of 90.27 ± 0.85 % at 1550 nm, efficiently harnessing the energy within the near-infrared II (NIR-II) region of the solar spectrum. The LEH hydrogel is optimized through structure design, achieving an evaporation rate of 2.48 kg m⁻² h⁻¹. Evaporative flow-driven convection suppresses the concentration polarization of protonated lithium titanate (HTO) and accelerates ion transport. Localized interfacial heating enhances adsorption kinetics, enabling efficient lithium extraction. The LEH demonstrates a Li⁺ adsorption capacity of 23.4 mg g⁻¹ in simulated solution under 1 Sun and exhibits superior Li⁺/Mg²⁺ selectivity with a separation factor of approximately 180 in high-magnesium brines. Importantly, the collected condensate can be reused as the water source for preparing acidic eluent for Li⁺ stripping, enabling condensate-assisted regeneration of the LEH. This integrated strategy highlights the potential of coupling solar-driven lithium extraction with freshwater co-generation to reduce freshwater demand in salt lake lithium recovery.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Apr 2026
Accepted
16 Jun 2026
First published
17 Jun 2026

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Charge transfer cocrystal hydrogels for solar-driven lithium extraction and water co-generation

W. Sun, J. Gu, S. Zhang , Y. Su, L. Sun, X. Zhang, F. Yang, J. Feng, R. Ding and W. Hu, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6TA03060B

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