This new device can draw water from desert air

midian182

Posts: 9,745   +121
Staff member

Researchers have developed a device that can draw water from even the driest desert air. Scientists from MIT and UC Berkeley have field-tested the invention, which improves on a concept design from last year, in Tempe, Arizona, proving the potential of the method.

When it was first proposed in a Science article last year, the paper drew a lot of attention—not all of it good. "It got a lot of hype, and some criticism," said Professor Evelyn Wang, who worked on both studies. “All of the questions that were raised from last time were explicitly demonstrated in this paper. We've validated those points.”

Most methods of drawing water from air require humidities of over 50 percent and lots of energy to work, but the improved design can extract potable water at humidities as low as 10 percent and is solar-powered.

“This has no moving parts. It can be operated in a completely passive manner in places with low humidity but large amounts of sunlight,” said researcher Sameer Rao.

The device is based on a type of high-surface-area, super-porous material called metal-organic framework (MOF). The MOF in this device can extract water from the air during the night and store it in its pores. The water is released during the day using sunlight.

By testing the device on the rooftop of an Arizona State University building, the team "was field-testing in a place that's representative of these arid areas, and showed that we can actually harvest the water, even in subzero dewpoints."

Researchers say that the device’s output is estimated to be more than a quarter-liter of water per day per kilogram of MOF, and no impurities were found during testing. If scaled up and made more efficient, that yield could be tripled. "We hope to have a system that's able to produce liters of water," said Wang.

Permalink to story.

 
Solar powered is great, especially in desert regions where there is an abundance of sunlight but the big question will be the economy of scale and can one large enough to be practical still be affordable?
 
Just how much moisture does this extract from the air and what effect does it have on a deserts local ecology?
 
Just how much moisture does this extract from the air and what effect does it have on a deserts local ecology?
Short answers:
1: As much as you want.
2: None.

Long answer:
The atmosphere will always hold as much available water vapor as possible at any given moment. In science you will often hear the phrase "Nature abhors a vacuum" and the same principles apply here. What you take from the air will be replaced. You cannot affect the ecology of the desert by pulling water from the air any more than you can empty the ocean onto the beach.

(Explanation assumes we all remember grade school science and won't need to ask things like "Where does all the water come from?")
 
Can they use this on the space station so they don't have to drink recycled urine? No, I guess not - all water vapor in that sealed environment has to be brought in, and you wouldn't want this machine drying the air out.
 
To Mars !!
Too bad that the atmosphere on mars is over 95% carbon dioxide, 4% inert gases, and only scant traces of water vapor. On Mars, almost all the water is frozen (because of extremely low atmospheric pressure),and only at the north pole is it above the surface. Also at south pole, but trapped beneath a permanent carbon dioxide ice cap.
 
Now we only need to reclaim the water from the dead also...
"A Deathstill was a place where the water of a person's dead body could be reclaimed. On Arrakis, water was the most precious commodity. According to Fremen tradition, a man's water belonged to his tribe. As a result, the Fremen developed deathstills as a way of reclaiming the water of their dead, since it belonged to the tribe, and the dead had no further use of it."
... And some sand worms...
Sorry, couldn't help myself thinking of Dune series...
 
Both of you seem to miss the amount of salt in sweat, that is not present in condensate. But hey, if she is cute I would go for it.
 
Back