Warka Water tower to pull drinking water out of thin air - First debuted in rural Ethiopia, and conceived as a way to help communities in the area that lack access to safe drinking water, the innovative design recently took home the World Design Impact Prize in Taipei. |
People living in arid,
drought-ridden areas may soon be able to get water straight from a source
that´s all around them - the air, American researchers said Thursday.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
Scientists
have developed a box that can convert low-humidity air into water, producing
several litres every 12 hours, they wrote in the journal Science.
"It
takes water from the air and it captures it," said Evelyn Wang, a
mechanical engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and
co-author of the paper.
The
technology could be "really great for remote areas where there's really
limited infrastructure", she said.
The
system, which is currently in the prototype phase, uses a material that
resembles powdery sand to trap air in its tiny pores. When heated by the sun or
another source, water molecules in the trapped air are released and condensed -
essentially "pulling" the water out of the air, the scientists said.
A
recent test on a roof at MIT confirmed that the system can produce about a glass
of water every hour in 20 to 30 percent humidity.
Companies
like Water-Gen and EcoloBlue already produce atmospheric water-generation units
that create water from air. What is special about this new prototype, though,
is that it can cultivate water in low-humidity environments using no energy,
Wang said.
"It
doesn't have to be this complicated system that requires some kind
refrigeration cycle," she said in an interview with the Thomson Reuters
Foundation.
An
estimated one third of the world´s population lives in areas with low relative
humidity, the scientists said. Areas going through droughts often experience
dry air, but Wang said the new product could help them still get access to
water.
"Now
we can get to regions that really are pretty dry, arid regions," she said.
"We can provide them with a device, and they can use it pretty
simply."
The
technology opens the door for what co-author Omar Yaghi called
"personalized water".
Yaghi,
a chemistry professor at University of California, Berkeley, envisions a future
where the water is produced off-grid for individual homes and possibly farms
using the device.
"This
application extends beyond drinking water and household purposes, off grid. It
opens the way for use of (the technology) to water large regions as in
agriculture."
In the next few years, Wang said, the developers hope to find a way to reproduce the devices on a large scale and eventually create a formal product. The resulting device, she believes, will be relatively affordable and accessible.
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