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Science

A Device That Can Pull Drinking Water From the Air Just Won the Latest XPrize (fastcompany.com) 359

Two years ago, XPrize, which creates challenges that pit the brightest minds against one another, announced that it would give any startup or company $1 million that can turn thin air into water. This month, it announced that the challenge has been concluded. From a report: A new device that sits inside a shipping container can use clean energy to almost instantly bring clean drinking water anywhere -- the rooftop of an apartment building in Nairobi, a disaster zone after a hurricane in Manila, a rural village in Zimbabwe -- by pulling water from the air. The design, from the Skysource/Skywater Alliance, just won $1.5 million in the Water Abundance XPrize. The competition, which launched in 2016, asked designers to build a device that could extract at least 2,000 liters of water a day from the atmosphere (enough for the daily needs of around 100 people), use clean energy, and cost no more than 2 cents a liter.

"We do a lot of first principles thinking at XPrize when we start designing these challenges," says Zenia Tata, who helped launch the prize and serves as chief impact officer of XPrize. Nearly 800 million people face water scarcity; other solutions, like desalination, are expensive. Freshwater is limited and exists in a closed system. But the atmosphere, the team realized, could be tapped as a resource. "At any given time, it holds 12 quadrillion gallons -- the number 12 with 19 zeros after it -- a very, very, big number," she says. The household needs for all 7 billion people on earth add up to only around 350 or 400 billion gallons. A handful of air-to-water devices already existed, but were fairly expensive to use. The new system, called WEDEW ("wood-to-energy deployed water") was created by combining two existing systems. One is a device called Skywater, a large box that mimics the way clouds are formed: It takes in warm air, which hits cold air and forms droplets of condensation that can be used as pure drinking water. The water is stored in a tank inside the shipping container, which can then be connected to a bottle refill station or a tap.

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A Device That Can Pull Drinking Water From the Air Just Won the Latest XPrize

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 22, 2018 @02:41AM (#57515929)

    It's called a dehumidifier.

    • by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @02:45AM (#57515937)

      Or a windtrap, if used on Arrakis.

    • it's a new type of scam aimed at investors.
      Let's call it "Dehumidifier as water supply investor scam"
      or shorter : "Dehumidifier scam"

      • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @07:10AM (#57516495) Journal

        It condenses money out of thin air!

        =Smidge=

      • It's a very old type of scam. I remember reading about "Krupec Pyramiden" (Google it) when I wasn't even a teen yet.

        Even that I only know about because it was local, there are probably thousands like it. Extracting water from the air is a favourite of "inventors" who know too little physics to know how little they know. And also of scammers who do know, but won't give up the prospect of getting rich just because their idea didn't work.

      • Not really that new of a scam, actually:

        https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]

        Whatever you believe about crowdfunding, Triton and Fontus were straight-up scams from the start, backed by fancy kickstarter videos.

        Anymore, the more polished a kickstarter video looks, the less likely I am to trust that the product is real.

      • by mspohr ( 589790 )

        It also captures the water gained by pyrolysis of wood. (CxHx + O2 -> H2O + CO2)

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Indeed. A lot of people don't like the YouTuber Thunderf00t, for good reason, but he's done some good videos debunking the concept. Starting with the WaterSeer [youtube.com], Zero Mass Water [youtube.com] and of course the self-filling waterbottle [youtube.com].

      TL;DR: yes, it can be done. Yes, it's been done. But it's cheaper and easier to load a tank of water on a helicopter or truck and take it to where it needs to be.

    • A compression based dehumidifier is very inefficient. This system is pretty slick; they vaporize biomass (releasing the moisture content) and turn it to a charcoal for fertilizer, making the process carbon-negative, according to TFA.

      The last part raises my eyebrows a bit-- they seem to claim they aren't releasing CO2, but it isn't clear where the actual energy input comes from (chemically). Presumably it is just a portion of the biomass that is burned.

    • ever seen the constant stream of water draining out of an A/C in the deep south, in the middle of summer?
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @03:01AM (#57515977)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Bob-Bob Hardyoyo ( 4240135 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @03:12AM (#57516005)

      Thundef00t has also shit all over various dehumidifier scams in youtube rants. Water from thin air is not feasible in the locations where it is needed. Arid regions have, wait-for-it, not enough water in the air.

      • by Chris Katko ( 2923353 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @05:19AM (#57516241)

        If only there was a device that could--can't think of a good new verb for it--lets say, "move" water from places we do have, and then it could travel through some kind of cylindrical containing device that held the water molecules in, and pushed this liquid medium through the hollow cylinder to the place where its needed.

        How do they move oil? I can't think of it. But it's like, they send oil thousands of miles.

        Too bad I'm pretty sure it only works for oil and not for water because nobody makes any goddamn money from saving lives.

        • People need a lot less oil than they need water. Transporting water by pipe quickly becomes infeasible.

        • You have people living in regions that are at a subsistence level and have been since the dawn of time. You pipe in water and give them food and then in a few generations you have 1000x as many people in that region. As soon as you get bored maintaining everything for them, or have some situation in your own homeland that precludes it, you have drought, famine and starving people. Best case is a huge refugee crisis that you're unequipped to handle because the people are now a population greater than the
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        And as usual, especially for Dave Jones, both have been debunked. Seriously, apart from Batterizer I don't think Jones has ever once been right in one of his debunking rants.

        In this case they are applying the wrong test to the device. If you read TFA you can see that it needs a lot of energy to work, which they suggest supplying via a biomass generator or solar+battery. As such it's not designed to run continuously or even be particularly efficient, it's just designed to supply emergency water for a short p

        • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

          Seriously, apart from Batterizer I don't think Jones has ever once been right in one of his debunking rants.

          What else has he been wrong about?

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            He did a video about the solar cycle way prototype in Europe. He failed to consider the costs of installing and maintaining a normal cycle way, and then a year later the numbers released for it debunked his pessimistic estimates. His speculation about the surface durability were proven unfounded too.

            The biggest issue of course is that he was looking at a prototype, considering the cost of prototype parts and deployment, so even if his guesses had been right his point would have been irrelevant.

            I'm not sayin

        • Dave Jones has debunked BattBump, Solar Roadways, 121GW multimeters, white van speakers and that self-filling water bottle thing. He has been right: they are all scams. You can prove it via basic engineering. You don't know what you are talking about.
          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            The multimeters thing is interesting, considering how bad his own ones are. Poor quality manufacturing combined with design flaws does not make a good product.

      • Arid regions have, wait-for-it, not enough water in the air.

        Not all regions where water is required are arid. There are many reasons people could be in need of water, not the least of which being a contaminated local supply.

      • Thundef00t has also shit all over various dehumidifier scams in youtube rants.

        Yeah, but he's not a credible source, and Dave is.

    • by koavf ( 1099649 )
      The good news is that it's not a scam or water from air--it's water from biomass that contains water.
    • by Zuriel ( 1760072 )

      Those 'water from thin air' systems do work, it's the cost and power consumption that's a problem. The one that is supposed to fill a bottle of water in a couple of hours from a tiny 5W solar panel, for example.

      There's no reason why you couldn't set up a big system with 20 kW of solar and get useful amounts of water out of it, the problem is feasibility. It's usually cheaper to put a tank of water on a truck.

      • It's usually cheaper to put a tank of water on a truck.

        This is exactly the point. Nobody is saying that dehumidifiers don't work. They are saying there is no way to use them as a water supply in any way close to being economical. Anyone that claims otherwise failed basic science class or is lying to you.

  • Physics, it works! (Score:5, Informative)

    by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @03:22AM (#57516025)
    To condense water out of the air you need to dissipate _at_ _least_ the latent energy of evaporation. That's 2.2MJ/kg or 0.7 kWh*hr in other words, A LOT. If you want to use a solar panel, that would be around 4 square meters to produce that much energy in 1 hour, even taking into account that freezers have >100% efficiency.

    So a fairly large 4x4 meter solar panel (that would cost around $5000 to install) will produce around 50 liters of water per day (that's an optimistic estimate), or around 18 tons of water per year. If usable life of the device is 10 years then we're looking at about 200 tons for about $5000, or 4 cents per kg.
    • You've got two major errors which mostly but not entirely cancel each other out.

      Condensing water produces heat energy. It's why your can of ice cold beer warms up. Water in the air condenses on the can, adding energy to the can and warming up the beer. So you don't need to produce the latent heat energy of evaporation, you just need a means to dissipate it to maintain the temperature of the chilled condensing surface.

      To dissipate the energy that's absorbed, all you need is a heat pump (and a suffic
  • by koavf ( 1099649 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @03:28AM (#57516043) Homepage
    To be fair, it's not well-reported but the other half of the technology is these biomass gasifiers: http://allpowerlabs.com/ [allpowerlabs.com] This is not ambient atmosphere water extraction but extraction from biomass. Also not a scam. Get educated before you throw around your armchair physicist hot takes, guys.
  • It's an old idea (Score:5, Informative)

    by Ozoner ( 1406169 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @03:41AM (#57516069)

    Nothing new here folks.

    Commercial Atmospheric water generators have been around for a long time

    see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    The military routinely use them in desert areas.

    They do take a fair amount of energy to run, but not as bad as you might think if transverse flow heat ex changers are used to recover lost heat (and cold).

  • "At any given time, it holds 12 quadrillion gallons -- the number 12 with 19 zeros after it -- a very, very, big number,"

    Umm, a quadrillion has 15 zeroes, not 19.

    If Zenia Tata doesn't even know that all those *illion numbers are multiples of three zeroes, should she really be "chief impact officer" of the x-Prizes?

  • Don't we already have enough scam artists peddling this? Elementary physics will tell you that it doesn't work. Pulling water out of air works. Yes. But you need to "harvest" a LOT of air and dehumidify it. There's even already machines that do that. They are called dehumidifiers, aptly named. And that takes a LOT of energy. If you plan to do this by solar power, be prepared to drop some pretty penny (and dedicate some real estate) to collecting that energy.

    This is only feasible in areas where water is scar

  • "From a report: A new device that sits inside a shipping container can use clean energy to almost instantly bring clean drinking water anywhere"

    In Maine, at least, some legislation was enacted to discourage using wood in a variety of systems to heat homes. IT seems that some of those were pretty dirty. Gasifiers were pretty large scale, and usually used a lot of otherwise unused biomass. And were, as mentioned elsewhere, mot often located where the biomass was. One I knew of was located at the chip and lumb

  • Going from the image [fastcompany.com], they could also provide a water transportation system, that way the women wouldn't have to walk ten miles a day with a water bucket on their head. But I guess the men have better things to spend their money on, like $3,000 [i.redd.it] on a pair of shoes.
  • I wonder if a modified version of this could be done on mars? There is H20 in the air. Might actually allow for moving around on Mars, and still obtaining fresh water.
  • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Monday October 22, 2018 @11:19AM (#57517761)

    It's my air conditioner.

  • There is water in the Martian atmosphere [wikipedia.org] so can we send some of these to Mars now, and have them build a store of drinking water for us when we get there?

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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