Monday, May 2, 2011

Namib Beetle Inspires Fog Sails





A researcher is trying to improve fog harvesting by improving the mesh used. This is a good idea.

Taking it a bit farther, I suspect that one liter production per meter is quite attainable.  That then suggests that a simple sail rig carrying a ten by ten meter mesh will be able to produce 100 liters of water.  A little experimentation could give us something more compact and even easier to manage.  In the meantime I am quite happy to rig a simple sail operating edge on to any wind and draining into the root mass of an adjacent tree.

In that way we can walk a forest up a coastal zone quite easily since an established forest will produce its own humidity and capture much of its own water taking much of the burden away from the sails.

On top of that it is bound to be very cheap and need little maintenance.

We can now envisage going to a ruined coast where we establish a break of mangroves at the water’s edge and plant trees inland as far as the fog takes you with these fog sails.  In time the newly established forest will stabilize and permit further expansion inland producing wealth for the growers.


Namib Beetle inspires new 'fog harvesting' research

21:55 April 26, 2011



Mesh being tested for use on fog-harvesting devices by Shreerang Chhatre and colleagues at MIT (Photo: Patrick Gillooly)

For years, people living in high-altitude or coastal arid countries have been collecting drinking water by harvesting fog. More specifically, they've mounted pieces of fine netting over top of containers, left the setup overnight, then collected the fog droplets that got caught in the net and rolled down its fibers into the container. While it might sound like a rather insubstantial way of acquiring water, under the right conditions it can yield a surprisingly large amount of liquid. Now, a chemical engineering graduate student from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is looking to improve on the technique.

Shreerang Chhatre was inspired by the Namib Beetle, an insect that collects water droplets on bumps on its back, then drinks them when they roll down to its mouth. His "fog harvesters," like those created by other scientists, use a mesh panel in place of a net. Even solid materials such as plastic sheeting will work, although they can create wind currents that carry some of the moisture away.

In tests of existing fog harvesters, some have been able to collect one liter (about a quart) of water per meter of mesh, per day.

Chhatre is trying to boost that output by refining the materials that the mesh is made from, attempting to strike a balance between hydrophilic materials that attract water droplets, and hydrophobic materials that then send them on their way down into the collection container. The Namib Beetle employs a similar strategy, with hydrophilic bumps that droplets stick to, and hydrophobic channels that allow those droplets to slide down to its mouth without being absorbed along the way.

Much as improving the amount of water obtainable from fog harvesters is a technical problem, it's also a social one – most of the potential users likely couldn't afford such a device. To that end, Shreerang is hoping that people in developed nations might also start using them, simply to offset their consumption of fresh water from traditional sources.

The more units that are sold to such First World consumers, the lower the prices could be for Third World recipients, and the more accessible the technology would become.

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