| >>>> consider a 'cube' of fins of this stuff sitting in shade with a collection bucket underneath it. There is no cube. The droplet's are attached strongly to the surface. If the droplets drop to a cube, you can replace the cube with a cotton mat and let the water evaporate and get a low temperature mat. And then use the difference of temperature to generate electricity https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermoelectric_generator and turn on a lamp. And now you are breaking the second law of thermodynamics. Consider a typical unplugged dehumidifier with Calcium Chloride. It generates water that drops to a cube, but it's salt water that evaporates less than fresh water, so you can't do the trick. If you use silica gel, the water is trapped inside the material, so there is no cube. With this new material the droplets are on the surface, but they refuse to fall down. With an AC you get a cube full fresh water, but it obviously work only while plugged, so there is no magic. > And while it may sound like nonsense it was reproduced in another lab [1]. They reproduced the visible droplets in the surface of the material. In neither lab they had a cube filing process. The sentence you quoted in [1] is very misleading. |
You coat a piece of aluminum with nano-pore material and hang it vertically. Air flows over it and droplets appear on its surface (based on the paper). You also hang a frame of vertical wires (unenergized just small diameter wires, kind of like a screen but without the horizontal members) in front of the sheet by 1/2 the droplet's diameter. The wires don't touch the surface, they are suspended 1/2 droplet away.
Now when a droplet forms, it grows and intersects the wire (which is not hydrophobic) Surface tension puts the droplet around the wire and it slides down to the bottom of the wire frame, impacting any other droplets that had formed below it.
The resulting liquid water drops off the bottom of the wire frame into a catch pan below.
If one of these assemblies generates net water production from RH 70% air then an array of then would generate more water.
What am I missing?