Conventional desalination plants dump billions of gallons of super-salty brine back into oceans annually, creating dead zones where nothing can survive. University of Rochester researchers just solved that problem with laser-etched black metal that turns seawater into drinking water without producing any liquid waste. Their solar-powered panels capture nearly 100% of salts as harvestable solids instead of toxic discharge.
The breakthrough couldn’t come at a better time. With 2.2 billion people lacking safely managed drinking water, coastal communities increasingly rely on energy-hungry desalination plants that create as many environmental problems as they solve.
The Coffee Ring That Changes Everything
Femtosecond lasers create super-wicking surfaces that exploit familiar physics for continuous operation.
The magic happens on metal surfaces precisely textured with femtosecond laser pulses, creating microscopic grooves that both absorb nearly all solar energy and wick thin water films across the surface. As sunlight heats the active region, pure water evaporates while dissolved salts get pushed outward—the same “coffee ring effect” that leaves dark residue around dried coffee droplets.
This self-cleaning mechanism prevents the crusty salt buildup that typically clogs other solar desalination systems when exposed to real seawater. The laser-etched surface divides into two zones: an active region for evaporation and a passive region where salts accumulate safely away from the water processing area. Tests using samples from Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans confirmed the surface remains operational indefinitely, according to optics professor Chunlei Guo, who led the research published in Light: Science & Applications.
From Waste Stream to Revenue Stream
The same technology extracts lithium for EV batteries, turning desalination into mineral recovery.
Here’s where it gets interesting for anyone driving electric vehicles: the collected salts contain lithium and other valuable minerals typically mined through environmentally destructive processes. By embedding hydrogen titanate nanoparticles into the laser-etched grooves, the team extracted 50% of lithium from Great Salt Lake samples during their desalination process.
“Mining lithium from the earth is highly taxing in energy and environmental terms,” Guo notes. This solar-powered approach could supply battery materials while producing drinking water—like getting your morning coffee and charging your phone from the same outlet, except the stakes involve global water security and clean energy transitions.
Unlike reverse osmosis plants that return 58% of intake water as concentrated brine, this method funded by the National Science Foundation and Gates Foundation points toward coastal facilities that eliminate their biggest environmental headache while creating new revenue streams from recovered minerals.




























