On Fri, Mar 4, 2022 at 4:37 AM Thaths via Silklist <
[email protected]> wrote:

Keeping this decade-and-a-half-plus thread going....
>
> https://news.mit.edu/2022/solar-desalination-system-inexpensive-0214
>

And another one:

https://news.utexas.edu/2022/05/23/low-cost-gel-film-can-pluck-drinking-water-from-desert-air/

More than a third of the world’s population lives in drylands, areas that
experience significant water shortages. Scientists and engineers at The
University of Texas at Austin have developed a solution that could help
people in these areas access clean drinking water.

The team developed a low-cost gel film made of abundant materials that can
pull water from the air in even the driest climates. The materials that
facilitate this reaction cost a mere $2 per kilogram, and a single kilogram
can produce more than 6 liters of water per day in areas with less than 15%
relative humidity and 13 liters in areas with up to 30% relative humidity.

The research builds on previous breakthroughs from the team, including the
ability to pull water out of the atmosphere and the application of that
technology to create self-watering soil. However, these technologies were
designed for relatively high-humidity environments.

“This new work is about practical solutions that people can use to get
water in the hottest, driest places on Earth,” said Guihua Yu, professor of
materials science and mechanical engineering in the Cockrell School of
Engineering’s Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering. “This could
allow millions of people without consistent access to drinking water to
have simple, water generating devices at home that they can easily operate.”


The water-capturing film can easily be molded into many different shapes.
The new paper appears in Nature Communications.

The researchers used renewable cellulose and a common kitchen ingredient,
konjac gum, as a main hydrophilic (attracted to water) skeleton. The
open-pore structure of gum speeds the moisture-capturing process. Another
designed component, thermo-responsive cellulose with hydrophobic (resistant
to water) interaction when heated, helps release the collected water
immediately so that overall energy input to produce water is minimized.

Other attempts at pulling water from desert air are typically
energy-intensive and do not produce much. And although 6 liters does not
sound like much, the researchers say that creating thicker films or
absorbent beds or arrays with optimization could drastically increase the
amount of water they yield.


The process of creating the water-capturing film from its ingredients.
The reaction itself is a simple one, the researchers said, which reduces
the challenges of scaling it up and achieving mass usage.

“This is not something you need an advanced degree to use,” said Youhong
“Nancy” Guo, the lead author on the paper and a former doctoral student in
Yu’s lab, now a postdoctoral researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. “It’s straightforward enough that anyone can make it at home if
they have the materials.”


A prototype device for capturing water from the air using the new film.
The film is flexible and can be molded into a variety of shapes and sizes,
depending on the need of the user. Making the film requires only the gel
precursor, which includes all the relevant ingredients poured into a mold.

“The gel takes 2 minutes to set simply. Then, it just needs to be
freeze-dried, and it can be peeled off the mold and used immediately after
that,” said Weixin Guan, a doctoral student on Yu’s team and a lead
researcher of the work.

The research was funded by the U.S. Department of Defense’s Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), and drinking water for soldiers
in arid climates is a big part of the project. However, the researchers
also envision this as something that people could someday buy at a hardware
store and use in their homes because of the simplicity.

Yu directed the project. Guo and Guan co-led experimental efforts on
synthesis, characterization of the samples and device demonstration. Other
team members are Chuxin Lei, Hengyi Lu and Wen Shi.
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