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by Kon-Peki
1586 days ago
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Yeah, I get that. But... These are tiny little things, less than 4cm in diameter and floating on seawater. They rely on the sun shining on them to vaporize the water, and in fact the linked paper says that the convection cover is needed when outdoors in the wind. So... it implies that you can't have anything blocking the sun from fully shining on it, because it already has enough problems gathering enough heat when the wind blows, right? Where does this condenser go? Obviously, I don't know anything about engineering in this domain ;) |
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For a family of 4, you need maybe 3 liters * 4 = 12 liters in a day. So you need a 3 m^2 device to satisfy them. Or something on that order.
Finally, this thing will probably be encased in a glass chamber, which will collect the water vapor and then condense them in some container. So that is a whole other additional cost. So, yes some sunlight will be blocked or reflected by this additional structure.
If you do a quick image search of "solar desalinator" you will see plenty of examples of how this condensation works.