These fins collect water from thin air

Fins collect water

Clean, safe water is a limited resource and access to it depends on local bodies of water. We know there are systems that pull water from thin air but they typically work like an air conditioner does, and they use an extreme amount of resources to end up with water.

We know thanks to water generating companies like WaterGen and Drinkable Air work in dry regions that have some water vapor in the air. To harvest small amounts of humidity more effectively, researchers in ACS Energy Letters have developed a compact device with absorbent-coated fins that first trap moisture and then generate potable water when heated.

They say the prototype could help meet growing demands for water, especially in arid locations.

Earth’s atmosphere holds trillions of liters of fresh water as vapor, but it’s challenging to collect this colorless, transparent and dilute gas. We feel water in the desert in the morning on our tents and we see dew drops on the plants so we know it’s there.

Previously, researchers developed systems that trap dew or fog, pooling the liquid into containers. But in dry areas that don’t have much dew, special materials like temperature-responsive hydrogels, metal-organic frameworks or zeolites (crystalline aluminosilicates) may help pull small amounts of moisture from the air and release the water when heated.

For these absorbents to be practical for real-world use, they need to be incorporated into compact and portable devices with a waste heat source, such as applications that run at high temperatures or systems that emit heat as a by-product. So, Xiangyu Li, Bachir El Fil and colleagues developed a humidity harvester that could fit those specifications.

The researchers designed water-adsorbent “fins” by sandwiching a copper sheet between copper foams coated in a commercially available zeolite. Compared to previous studies that focused on material development, the authors say that the co-design of the adsorption bed with material properties resulted in thin adsorbent fins, which are compact and can quickly harvest water.

For proof-of-concept demonstrations, they created a device with 10 small adsorbent fins placed side by side on a copper base plate about 2 millimeters apart, a distance that maximizes moisture capture from desert-like air containing 10% relative humidity.

Within an hour, the fins saturated and then released the trapped moisture once the base reached 363 Fahrenheit. Extrapolating to 24 collection-release cycles, the team calculated that 1 liter of absorbent coating on the fins could produce up to 1.3 liters of potable water per day in air with 30% relative humidity — a volume two to five times greater than previously developed devices.

The work identifies a key opportunity for rapid moisture capture and water harvesting from dry air, multiple times per day. With further development, this system could be integrated into existing infrastructures that produce waste heat, such as buildings or transportation vehicles, to provide a cost-effective option for generating potable water in arid regions, the researchers say.

Solar energy water generator

Maria Telkes, a solar energy pioneer, developed solutions like this with even less complexity. One of her prototypes for collecting water from seawater was developed for the American army. It’s time already to start putting low-tech solutions into action – much needed for refugees in Africa, and now for Palestinians in Gaza who need to achieve a better future for themselves than what Hamas has offered.

She also developed a gas-less solar cooker, a simple box that helps people cook food with the sun. There is a DIY version we wrote about used by a Gaza man on the roof of his house.

Cook with the sun
Cook with the sun

 

Karin Kloosterman
Karin Kloostermanhttp://www.greenprophet.com
Karin Kloosterman is an award-winning journalist, innovation strategist, and founder of Green Prophet, one of the Middle East’s pioneering sustainability platforms. She has ranked in the Top 10 of Verizon innovation competitions, participated in NASA-linked challenges, and spoken worldwide on climate, food security, and future resilience. With an IoT technology patent, features in Canada’s National Post, and leadership inside teams building next-generation agricultural and planetary systems — including Mars-farming concepts — Karin operates at the intersection of storytelling, science, and systems change. She doesn’t report on the future – she helps design it. Reach out directly to [email protected]

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