Christmas-colored droplets hint at solutions for fog harvesting

2022-12-15
When droplets glide along a specially engineered wire, they gain speed as they coalesce. When the water-attracting wire is inclined, the droplets propel themselves to zip along the line. But the surprise occurs when two water droplets slide into one another and coalesce. By joining together, the droplets' speed increases by up to 270% more than before the coalescence. This image looks like a festive, holiday-inspired necklace. But it's actually colorful water droplets clinging to a wire. Because the wire is engineered to attract water, the droplets glide along the line, eventually merging into one another. Led by Northwestern University's Kyoo-Chul Kenneth Park, this new research is not just beautiful. It also could help optimize many environmental processes, including collecting fog from the atmosphere for drinking water. When the water-attracting wire is inclined, the droplets propel themselves to zip along the line. But the surprise occurs when two water droplets slide into one another and coalesce. By joining together, the droplets' speed increases by up to 270% more than before the coalescence. By understanding droplet transport along a wire, Park says his team is closer to optimizing the ability to harvest fog from the atmosphere. As water scarcity becomes an increasing problem around the world, fog harvesters have emerged as an inexpensive and accessible way to collect drinkable water. But they are inefficient, with water droplets often escaping through the mesh harvesting sheets. Park's work could lead to new, more efficient designs for harvesters that outperform currently available meshes. The findings also have implications for mist elimination, oil/water separation, microplastics remediation and even biomedical filters. "The new phenomenon and mechanism about the sudden increase of droplet speed along a super-hydrophilic wire will benefit various fields," Park said. "This includes biomedical research requiring a fast transport of liquid, such as masks and filters, to protect people from airborne microplastics and droplets containing viruses." Park is an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering.
更多内容,请访问原始网站
文中所述内容并不反映新药情报库及其所属公司任何意见及观点,如有版权侵扰或错误之处,请及时联系我们,我们会在24小时内配合处理。
适应症
-
靶点
-
药物
-
来和芽仔聊天吧
立即开始免费试用!
智慧芽新药情报库是智慧芽专为生命科学人士构建的基于AI的创新药情报平台,助您全方位提升您的研发与决策效率。
立即开始数据试用!
智慧芽新药库数据也通过智慧芽数据服务平台,以API或者数据包形式对外开放,助您更加充分利用智慧芽新药情报信息。