Kecia Lynn on November 22, 2012, 3:25 PM
What's the Latest Development?
Deckard Sorensen, a scientist and co-founder of NBD Nano, has created
a prototype of a bottle that fills itself up by collecting water from
the surrounding atmosphere. The water comes when air from a fan passes
over a surface layered with nanoscale water-attracting and
water-repelling coatings. Until now all tests have been done with solar
cells and a rechargeable battery, but even that might not be necessary
in order for the technology to work: Anything that moves fast enough to
create an airflow -- "a car or a boat, or even a running human" -- could cause water to condense on the surface.
What's the Big Idea?
Sorensen got the idea from observing the Namib desert beetle, which
lives in a habitat that receives less than half an inch of water a year.
To get its water, the beetle climbs to the top of a dune and turns its
back, which contains water-attracting areas, to the wind. In addition to
providing water to people in need, the technology could be used in a
variety of applications, according to Sorensen: Greenhouses and green
roofs could enhance their water-drawing abilities, and large ships could
generate their own drinking water supply. In the meantime, he hopes to
bring the water bottle to the public by 2014.
Photo Credit: Shutterstock.comSource
Related news
Scientist takes inspiration from natural world to create self-filling water bottle
Sometimes, nature knows the best way to solve a problem. There's
a beetle that lives in a part of the world where less than .5 inches of
rain fall per year. So the beetle draws water from the air, and now a
businessman is trying to harness that idea to create, among other
things, a self-filling water bottle.
The lessons of nature have paid off in some remarkable products already — think airplanes, or Velcro, for example.
A unique water harvesting beetle, however, inspired Deckard Sorensen
to start a business. This beetle, the Namib desert beetle, lives in an
area that only gets half an inch of rainfall per year, he explained.
"Every morning this beetle climbs to the top of a sand dune, sticks
its back to the wind, and drinks 12 percent of its weight in water," he
said. "We use nanotechnology to mimic this beetle’s back so that we too
can pull water from the air."
On the beetle, water condenses in specific, hydrophilic areas of the
bug's back. Eventually, they flow to a storage area on the beetle.
Sorenson says with more than three quadrillion gallons of water in
the air, this is an incredibly rich source of a very scarce resource.
To convert the beetle's natural ability into human-usable technology,
Sorenson coated a surface with hydrophilic and hydrophobic coatings,
and then uses a fan to pass air over the surface. The water condenses on
the surface and, eventually, Sorenson has created a self-filling water
bottle.
"We see this being applicable to anything from marathon runners to
people in third-world countries, because we realize that water is such a
large issue in the world today, and we want to try to alleviate those
problems with a cost-efficient solution," he said.
Sorenson's company is also investigating how this might be used with
plants, essentially boosting the amount of moisture they can pull from
the air.
"We are looking to incorporate this in greenhouses or green roofs in
the immediate future, and then later on, we’re looking to see how far we
can really scale this up to supply maybe farms or larger agricultural
goals," Sorenson said.
And while it requires energy, Sorenson insists it's not much at all.
He said all of their tests how been powered by solar cells and a
rechargeable battery.
If the device were affixed to a car or a boat, or even a running
human, it might not even need that power supply to move the air over the
specially coated surgace.
"We actually see the maritime environment as really a very large
market for us because humidity is actually constantly regenerated over a
large body of water," Sorenson explained. "Then we can pull that
humidity from the air to support people who possibly take long trips on
yachts, or provide a sort of potable water source that can be run off a
solar panel while at sea."
Sorenson hopes to bring his water bottle to market by 2014.
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