Nanotech Coating Prevents Fogging 201
MilSF1 writes "MIT scientists have applied for a patent on a coating process that reduces or eliminates fogging on glass surfaces (car windshields, eyeglasses, etc). The new coating was described today at the 230th national meeting of the American Chemical Society."
The low tech solution (Score:5, Informative)
Ever wanted a shave in the shower but your hand-held mirror fogs up? Rather than buying this patented glass you can resort to a low-tech solution: Rub a little shaving foam over the glass and the wash the excess off so you have a thin, clear, greasy film on the glass.You'll find that the mirror no longer steams up.
The reason this works is because the greasy film causes much larger drops to coalesce on the mirror than you would normally get. These larger drops don't refract the light nearly and as a result are essentially transparent. This simple trick allows me to insure my sideburns are the same length even when under the most horrendous time presure.
See, who says that Physics can't be useful in everyday situations?
Simon
Re:The low tech solution (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The low tech solution (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The low tech solution (Score:5, Informative)
If you just heat up the mirror, then it will no longer suck the energy out of the water vapor and cause the fog.
Re:The low tech solution (Score:3, Informative)
I can't recall where I heard this, but some Japaneese hotel rooms feed the hot water for the shower through a miniature radiator behind the mirror. This way, running the shower automatically heats the mirror so that it doesn't fog.
Re:The low tech solution (Score:2)
Re:The low tech solution (Score:2)
But side burns man? Do you have an afro too? If not you need one, you should go for the insane druggy look.
Re:The low tech solution (Score:3)
spit on it and rub it around. fog prevention the low tech way.
Most divers know of this trick, spitting in your goggles and then rubbing it around gives you fog free facemask for the duration of your dive.
Re:The low tech solution (Score:2)
Your car
Your face gear (glasses, goggles, masks)
Home windows (sometimes they get foggy)
Also, it would be nice if I didn't have to waste my expensive shaving cream on my mirror (not that I use shaving cream, which is another problem).
They do have those mirrors that connect to your shower head and it trickles down warm water. The warm water keeps the mirror at the same temp as the shower, and you get no fog.
Re:The low tech solution (Score:2)
Does Windows Vista use this? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Does Windows Vista use this? (Score:2)
IF u cant afford that... (Score:2, Interesting)
Have the shower!
Get out, go to shave, and voila! No foggy window!
This nanotech gaff will definately work wonders in the car. Hey, it will mean I wont have to bust my gut when I get in having to clean every window of fog while my gf drives
Sorry (Score:3, Funny)
Fog-X (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Fog-X (Score:2)
Re:Fog-X (Score:2, Informative)
As a result, the droplets flatten and merge into a uniform, transparent sheet rather than forming countless individual light-scattering spheres.
Re:Fog-X (Score:2, Insightful)
If there is an object with a temperature below the dew point, water will condense on it, regardless of what the surface is like.
Re:Fog-X (Score:2)
One drawback... (Score:3, Funny)
Scuba Divers know a solution... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Scuba Divers know a solution... (Score:2)
So if MIT can get rid of my foggy gl
Re:Scuba Divers know a solution... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Scuba Divers know a solution... (Score:2)
The described invention works by opposite effect - like a detergent, breaking dropplets to form a uniform water film. The polymer they use for attaching silica microparticles can be effective on its own and it is proba
Re:Scuba Divers know a solution... (Score:2)
Re:Scuba Divers know a solution... (Score:2)
Good for motorcyclists (Score:2)
Re:Good for motorcyclists (Score:2)
Re:Good for motorcyclists (Score:2)
There are a few problems with it:
1) Even a brand new Fog City film makes the shield noticeably less clear
2) the dual-layer sheild has bad prismatic effects especially at night.
3) the plastic is extremely soft and easily scratched even by cleaning
4) resistance to fogging seems to decrease over time. (Perhaps they
Re:Good for motorcyclists (Score:2)
I got a new Caberg helmet that just doesn't fog at all. I think the visor comes precoated with something, I'm guessing it'll wear off eventually. This stuff sounds a bit more permanent.
awsome (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:awsome (Score:2)
when I lived in upper michigan, go out to shovel and then return inside, your glasses FROZE UP.
no amount of nanotech or other fancy coatings can stop that from happening.
it's not fog, it's ice. this is most obvious if your homes heating system is properly designed and adds humidity to the air. a 0degF pair of glasses getting in contact with warm humid air = nice thin layer of ice.
If you want to solve the fogging issue, get a decent quality eyeglas
Re:awsome (Score:2)
DOC? Department Of Corrections? Are you posting from prison?
Re:awsome (Score:2, Interesting)
every one I have seen looks like a row of fuel injectors on the air path goingto the house. they produce a super fine mist in pulses controlled by the embedded processor.
I have not seen one of those old style humidifiers cince the mid 90's in a house. they atsrted selling the fuel injector type in the late 80's.
Great news for scuba (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Great news for scuba (Score:4, Informative)
You spit in it whether it's dry or not. Then you rub it into the glass with a finger, and give it as much of a dunking as you like in whatever water is around. Then it'll stay fog-free unless you allow it to dry out - so either put it on & trap the moisture in, or leave your mask laying flat with some water inside.
Of course even the best tempered glass will fog: tempering isn't supposed to provide anti-fog properties, it's used as a safety measure.
Lastly, it's not like you can't buy bottles of anti-fog from any half-decent dive shop that'll do at least as good a job.
(As a UK diver, I might add that one downside of spitting in your mask is that on very cold winter dives, your spit will freeze solid on the glass before you can do anything useful with it ;o)
Re:Great news for scuba (Score:2)
I've been less than impressed with the anti-fog. I've tried a couple types, and I just find my spit works better. It's also a lot more convienient.
Re:Great news for scuba (Score:2)
I've been less than impressed with the anti-fog. I've tried a couple types, and I just find my spit works better. It's also a lot more convienient. :)
It's also cheaper & impossible to forget or run out of :o)
But the anti-fog from my local shop is actually better than spit - my spare mask always, but always, fogs up. It's had every cleaning treatment known to man, but no amount of spit stops it fogging.
A few drops of anti-fog, however, and it behaves itself perfectly. Annoying, but true!
Re:Great news for scuba (Score:2)
1947 solution (Score:5, Interesting)
"My crew chief applied a coating of Drene Shampoo to the windshield. For some unknown reason it worked as an effective antifrost device, and we continued using it even after the government purchased a special chemical that cost eighteen bucks a bottle."
Re:1947 solution (Score:4, Informative)
If scientists and normal people would read this stuff, I am sure they would rediscover all sorts of solutions to common problems.
L8,
AC
So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:5, Interesting)
I always think of nanotech as something more novel. If this were thousands of billions of tiny squeegee bulldozers one micron across moving the water to the edge of the glass, then I'd consider it nanotech.
Sponge (Score:2)
You pay MIT every time you buy a sponge!
Re:So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:5, Insightful)
The current state of the art of nanotech is not nanobots that can cure cancer. That's just what people speculate might come out of this technology, but how often is such exhuberance warranted? where's my flying car?
Also, by the way, something one micron across would be microtech by definition, not nanotech, but that's more me being a stickler than informative...
Re:So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:2)
This is a really lame definition, because that means we've had nanotech unknowingly for thousands of years. Although previously, 'nanotech' materials were found accidently and were created with bulk processes that operate on ordinary scales, and there was no physical explanation for why the materials worked. Now that we understand the properties of things like silica beads, and have w
Re:So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:2, Interesting)
Not if the components used to construct it were nanoscale.
This would, in my opinion, be a better use of the term nanotech - technology consisting of nanoscale components. Nanoscale coatings for various things have probably been available for some time.
In the past... (Score:2)
Re:So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:4, Insightful)
Nanotech is a buzzword. It doesn't really mean anything. It's never meant anything. It's just a new word used by chemists, solid state physicists, and others to get funding and excitement around the same stuff they've been doing for quite some time.
Re:So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:2)
Re:So why is this being called nanotech? (Score:2)
So is all chemistry. But not all chemistry gets to be called "nanotech". I personally do 'engineering at the nanometer scale', yet within an area which is not graced by the 'nanotech' buzzword (enzymatic catalysis). But I have no sour grapes about that.
Because as I said: the term is complete nonsense. If you apply your skills to one area it's 'nanotech' when applying the exact same skills to a different area isn't. A good portion of the p
Already excists for several years (Score:2)
Re:Already excists for several years (Score:3, Insightful)
Those products appear to be using (a) an attachable "sticker" or (b) a spray. Neither of which I would call particularly permanent. Anti-fog coatings (in general) have been around for years. The concept of applying them at manufacturing time using the particular process detailed in TFA is presumably the novel basis on which they are applying for a patent. If not, one would hope the Patents office will deny them the patent.
From
Filing for patents? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not a raging anti-patent looney screaming about the need for a free utopioan society, but if funding for this was provided by the public, surely the results belong to the public and the methods belong in the public domain rather than to MIT for the next 17-34 years.
woof.
Re:Filing for patents? (Score:2)
No, the salary of the lead researcher most likely comes from MIT. The countless grad students who did 99% of the work almost certainly get paid from the grant, not the school.
However, in most cases, you could call this a meaningless distinction. When a prof gets a grant, the school usually takes all of it, keeps a nice clean half of it for the privelage of "affiliation", and then doles the rest out to the actual research team in a standard salar
Ski Goggles (Score:2, Insightful)
Ice blinding (Score:2)
When I was climbing Mt Rainier I had to wear goggles on the last half due to strong winds and I was practically blind from the iced up fog. No attempts to rewarm them in my jacket worked, it was a real pain. Same thing happens on winter climbs in the Presidentials in NH. I've even tried applied coatings like "cat crap" but they don't work.
A coating that works on plastic t
Re:Ski Goggles (Score:2)
It seems to vary between individual goggles.
In my experience, the problem is if the seal between the layers is imperfect or compromised, moisture gets between the layers, and you will always have fogging problems. You might as well toss the goggles, you will always have problems with them.
But if you find a pair of goggles that happens to have a perfect seal, and you never mess with it, they will never fog (at least between the layers).
I have an old, cheap, scratched up, duct-taped pair of Alpina goggles
swimming goggles (Score:2)
not fog up. They usually do, evenso the packages
claim they have a coating which should prevent that. When swimming competitively, we had a low-tech solution: spit on the inside of the goggles would prevent fogging up.
It's not "nanotech" -- it's a chemical coating (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't know why they're bandying the term "nanotechnology" around, because it's not. It's a silica coating that prevents fogging. In fact, the only reason this made it to slashdot is because the term "nanotechnology" was used in the title of the original press release [eurekalert.org]. You'd think the people at MIT and the ACS would know better.
This does not meet those criteria.
Re:It's not "nanotech" -- it's a chemical coating (Score:2)
Re:It's not "nanotech" -- it's a chemical coating (Score:2)
It's nanomarketing!
<ducks/>
Re:It's not "nanotech" -- it's a chemical coating (Score:2)
(from the dictionary on my desk )
..and some give this
However dictionaries do disagree on this
dictionary.cambridge.org [slashdot.org]
Though i supp
Does Self-Cleaning glass not already do this? (Score:2)
I recall this being one of the properties of nano-coated self-cleaning glass such as Pilkington Activ or PPG SunClean, so does that not already provide the same anti-fog advantages?
Two Lower Tech Solutions (Score:3, Interesting)
And if you wish for a slightly higher tech solution, your local auto parts store sells a product called Fog-X which when applied to glass, prevents fogging.
Re:Two Lower Tech Solutions (Score:2)
This is sweet, it could save lives.
Re:Two Lower Tech Solutions (Score:2)
Lots of Mexicans chewing gum and spitting into bottles.
Re:Two Lower Tech Solutions (Score:2)
Patenting (Score:2)
Which means I'll be old and gray before I ever wear a pair of glasses with this stuff or own a car that has a windshield with it -- even if it's a potentially cheap solution.
Prior Art on this concept (links) (Score:4, Interesting)
Here [boatertalk.com] is a recent post describing his work.
Here [boatertalk.com] is a post from 2001 answering some questions about the glasses.
Here [boatertalk.com] is a search on the Boatertalk forum for most posts about it.
Been using FogX for years (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Been using FogX for years (Score:2)
Obligatory girlfriend comment (Score:2, Funny)
Bad Science (Score:2)
I already have an anti-fog device (Score:2)
This device is designed with macro technology (buzzword: MacroTech) -- which is not plagued by the extremely dangerou [crnano.org]
The real issue (Score:2, Insightful)
They are to make the solution permanent and durable and...
To make the solution of a material that will not distort your vision when looking through the surface of the material.
So yes, you could apply rain-X every month or wipe shaving cream on your surface
Re:Eyeglasses? (Score:5, Informative)
1. Closed visor, it fogs up within minutes - Can't see a thing.
2. Visor fully open (nothing to fog), subjected to a face full of fast moving water droplets - can't see a thing.
3. Visor open slightly, air can circulate, visor doesn't fog, but water droplets form on the inside of the visor, which severely reduce visibility.
Get a Fog City Hyper Optiks faceshield insert (Score:3, Informative)
These things are sweet. They don't fog, period, and if you get the UV reactive one, it darkens in sunlight so you don't need to carry two shields. It's not quite as dark a real reflective shield, but it's dark enough.
Swim goggles (Score:2)
Re:Eyeglasses? (Score:2)
You left out:
4. Stay home, get fired, run out of money, starve, can't see a thing.
Not just motorcyle helmets (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Eyeglasses? (Score:2, Informative)
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Re:Eyeglasses? (Score:4, Interesting)
FWIW, my full-face helmet has a little vent on the front below the mask, and a shield over my nose that keeps me from breathing right on it. The combination seems to work fairly well as long as I'm moving. It's a Bell Sprint, and I'm fairly happy with it (in combination with a mirrored face shield, for occasionally riding off into the sunset). Their website sucks - as you can't link directly to a product, it uses Flash, and they don't even list that they have different face shields - but most any non-Harley "powersports" shop I've been in carries their stuff.
Re:Eyeglasses? (Score:4, Informative)
So far, the coating is more durable on glass than plastic surfaces, but Rubner and his associates are currently working on processes to optimize the effectiveness of the coating for all surfaces. More testing is needed, they say.
Re:More light?!? (Score:2, Informative)
More light than comes from through the glass??
if it makes a smoother surface, it could allow more light through
Re:More light?!? (Score:2, Informative)
Because most of the light that does not pass through the glass is not "absorbed" inside the the glass but instead reflected at the air/glass and glass/air boundary layers.
Coating glass with stuff to minimize the reflection is a really old thing. Ever wonder why the lenses of (good) binoculars seem have a bluish or reddish tint to them ? Because they're coated to increase light transmission.
Re:More light?!? Yes, it does. (Score:5, Informative)
Adding a anti-reflective coating that has an intermediate index of refraction can reduce this. Nonlinearities in the reflection process mean that two interfaces of lesser change reflect far less than one big change. Camera lens makers do this all the time because many lens have 6 to 20 pieces of glass and thus a dozen or more interfaces that each would to attenuate light and create multiple internal reflections between the lens elements.
It may not be much, but that antifog coating probably lets a couple extra percent of the light through.
Re:More light?!? Yes, it does. (Score:2)
Antireflection coatings have a thickness of 1/4 lambda so that half the light that would normally be reflected is reflected with 180degrees phase shift. Thus for a single wavelength (v-Coating) it is possible to reduce reflection from 4% to less than 0.1%. For a broader range of wavelengths (U-coating) a number of coatings of different thicknesses are used.
The coating itself (typically CaF) is chosen because it is relatively easy to vapour-deposit to controlled thickness
Re:More light?!? Yes, it does. (Score:2)
Antireflection coatings have a thickness of 1/4 lambda so that half the light that would normally be reflected is reflected with 180degrees phase shift. Thus for a single wavelength (v-Coating) it is possible to reduce reflection from 4% to less than 0.1%. For a broader range of wavelengths (U-coating) a number of coatings of different thicknesses are used.
Yes, a 1/4 lambda film maximizes antireflection but a thicker film also works -- reducing reflection from 4% to
Re:More light?!? (Score:4, Informative)
Also: Whoa, Rubner got
Telescopes? (Score:2)
Would this work as a anti-dew coating on a telescope?
It would be nice to rid my set up of dew heaters and the attendant cables and power needs.
SteveM
Re:I wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
Humidity is still there - just not in the form of little droplets.
Re:I wonder... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's rice. And it's stupid. And it has nothing to do with cooling your machine in a practical or efficient manner.
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Enlighten me as to where liquid N2 is being used for cooling electronics in industry as well. Given that industry tends to be very interested in efficiency, examples shouldn't be hard to find?
Only that they are. Precisely because industry is interested in efficiency, and not in geek-points.
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
What you want is a computer that is immune to moisture, or a really good dehumidifier.
Re:Solve a Real Problem (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Solve a Real Problem (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Solve a Real Problem (Score:2)
the taser also has the upside of being useable in many situations other than morons who point at the screen
Re:I'm blind! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Who cares about fog in the dark? (Score:2)
Re:Who cares about fog in the dark? (Score:2)
-aiabx